Two Poems By: Alex MacDonald | The Quietus

Two Poems By: Alex MacDonald

Back across the Atlantic, on home turf, this week's new writing comes from London-based poet Alex MacDonald

photograph by Simon Marsham

Alex MacDonald lives and works in London, he has recently had poems published by Clinic, English Pen, Rising and the Oxfam Book of Young Poets. He was a runner up in the PigHog / Poetry School Prize and he ran the reading series ‘Selected Poems at the V&A Reading Rooms’.

The Dark Wash

When the presenter calls my name

and speaks of my achievements

like they’re the qualities of a dusty wine,

the video will play out my highs and lows:

the trip I took to the self-mummified priests of Japan,

me drinking the blood of the ruby tree toad,

showing how it influenced my sound, my whole image,

then my tiny beginnings, my music teacher

with a homemade t-shirt, my face ink-jet printed,

and then finally the fall of my glittery opponents,

their faces atomised into thumbnail pixels.

And when the dry ice rises and I’m finally alone,

I know I’ll wince and think of how each song

is like pulling out a knotted jumper

from the dark wash, hanging it on the line,

pinning it up to the evening sun.

Do Your Thing

Love you sleep so well like a dachshund

kidney bean shaped in diminishing Zzzzs

now putting on your clothes so good

I want to dress just like you

shirt collar and cuffs and new age necklace,

our love is so androgynous,

French plaiting your hair, when it falls

its colour could blind the weak,

our love makes us run past the eye hospital,

your laugh is like the opera libretto

where the subtitle says “love” in capitals,

and now if I can invite your eyes on stage

whoosh the tablecloth trick worked

but knotted in to the emerald marble

are your pupils starring as two black swastikas,

and now you’re heading for the stage door

on your way to become the Viking of 6th Avenue

with a cat stepping between your helmet’s horns,

when will I see you again, until tonight

my beautiful Danish Prince?

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