This is how I know I am back in London. This cute, blue-trimmed café, tucked away on a side street just off Dury Lane. My first time in London, I discovered it by accident, typing “London poetry open mic” into Google. This time The Poetry Café (or Poetry Place), was the first location I sought out. I’ve missed this cozy cubby, with book-shelve lined walls and a basement that doubles as a theater during poetry events.
Because I visited for lunch, I decided to be oh so unoriginal and post a picture of my meal. Because I am sure you all are just dying to see what I’m eating. Ha ha. Actually, you might be interested to know that the picture on the right features their white bean soup, bread and butter, and green tea, even though all but the bread and butter look nothing like you might imagine, given the description. All of the food tasted divine.
I went back in the evening for
Poetry Unplugged! And I am including this picture, so you can see why I jokingly
say “basement that doubles as a theater.” 
It really isn’t a theater in any sense of the word. It is an entertaining, welcoming, and homey place to read and listen to poetry. I listened for almost three hours as fellow poets read everything from love poem to political poems depicting the different personalities of Northern and Southern London (London is split by the Thames), to poems about buses and trains, and so forth. I read the poems posted below. The first one because it’s nearing July 4th in the U.S. and, as I mentioned to the crowd, this is the closest I get to writing a “patriotic poem.” Prose poetry seemed to be the new in thing last night, so I read “Self Resuscitation.” The prose gag started when one poet asked Niall (our host) if he could read a bit of prose instead of poetry and Niall jokingly begrudgingly allowed him. Then, another poet decided to read a prose poem he’d sneakily managed to get published in a book of short stories. After that, it became a theme and running gag of the night.
Patriotic Materialism
A
scenic back road on the outskirts of a quant and common town;
a
newly paved path, shimmering in the heat of summer,
where
gravel used to dust the horizon;
there
stands the emblem:
★A
three-layer cake with a three-car garage and three gabbles sporting
ginger-colored caps
★A
foundation set in marble and trekking to the front door might take hours
★The
bannister is snazzy, though—silver-white with vine shaped supports
★Wrap-around
porch and balcony
★Lacy
curtains and open-shutter windows in the traditional green
★Chocolate
colored batten trim
★A
rock garden with Greek lady fountains ceaselessly poring
★A
backyard desk stained coppery
★An
8-foot deep pool, a shimmering crystalline mirror
★There
is probably a wall-length television inside and a highbred parked in that
three-car facility
★All
of this surrounded by acres of green lawn cropped so neatly it looks like that
spongy, fake stuff they sell in the stores.
The
newness, the sparkle, the shine is glaring.
Yet,
above the pruned roses and wispy poplars
hangs
one limp Stars and Stripes and
one
impotent Confederate flag.
Their
blue threads have turned to slate
and
red has bled through
the
white.
Frayed
strings hang from both ends.
They
are too exhausted to flutter,
and
the only stars in sight
are
embossed on the screen door to match the iron-gate entrance.
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Self
Resuscitation
Detachment
was unintentional. The perpetual theta existence and dispassionate routine
animation, simply side effects of a dozing interlude and falsified life. I had
forgotten.
I
suppose that’s why recollection hits me with the force of a sudden spike on a
flatline, an upward, jet-powered, elevator ride to a Sears Tower height where
the end-chime sounds louder than at any other landing. A bass rhythm echoes at
light speed through the liquid of my veins, and the firework-blinding display
from this high-ride vertigo, this stomach-drop reversal of the gravitational
pull, an exhilaration so intense I almost gag. And amid this endorphin sensation,
this thump-thump momentum of adrenaline pumping, this quick succession of
harmonious physical and mental reactions, finally
I
remember to breathe
_________________
where is Much Ado? can't w8 2 get there - c u soon!
ReplyDeleteI saw it at the Curzon Cinema, which is really close to Leicester Square. Basically, I went to the theater district. The Odeon is also in that same vicinity, but I didn't get down town early enough to make a before 5pm showing at The Odeon (gets considerably more expensive after 5). Much Ado is actually showing at 7 cinemas in London. I just chose the closest two. This is my blog entry about Much Ado http://nicolesadventuresinlondon.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/much-ado-about-nothing-day.html. I LOVED it!
ReplyDeleteThere is a Underground station really, really close (like two blocks) from our flats, and it goes down to the theater district, and Covent Gardens, and Piccadilly, and other tourist areas.