Temptation
My temptation is to tell you
that
I do not love you, Archangel,
to tell you
that
I am not
still
a volcano
hurling molten ash
up
into the orange skies.
My temptation is to claim,
that
I am
now
dormant, quiet,
obedient
....
to the dulcet lime-infused
harmonies
of steady etiquette
and muffins by the fire,
with stoked up in-laws,
strapped down desires,
and an appreciation
of rolling greens,
clipped hedges,
village fetes
and the principles of social preservation,
the harnessing of human potential
to the good
of an imagined, scripted bourgeois
.....
security.
Archangel,
my temptation is to tell you that
the delicate rose of tranquillity
and a future clothed in comfort
and polite considerations
.....
moves me,
is the glacial silvered zenith
to which I do aspire.
....
My temptation is to tell you
that
I am not
a spitting, blazing, cracked
Vesuvius,
that
I am not
raining down my fury,
my fire,
my pure black and crimson
fulminating
cataclysmic
desire
on
an entire civilization,
like
the incandescent fiery and wholly destructive
ever-unfolding flower
that
I am.
My temptation is to tell you this, Archangel,
solely
so that, over porcelain cups of Lapsang tea
and finger foods with tiny useless napkins
and silver
edge-less knives,
I can sit with you
folded in your crimson wings
and
......
erupt.
‘Temptation’ is the poem used by Mark Hamilton Gruchy in his film which won the Near Nazareth Festival Competition in 2016. : https://vimeo.com/144136085