Written by John McCullough
He lives in Brighton, United Kingdom
Originally published in Magma Poetry, 2003, then reappeared
in his collection,Cloudfish, published by Pighog Press.
Known Light
Now you’re crossing that ocean, I have to confess
I’ve rather warmed to this shed where nothing is yours,
where your father found God in a Bunsen flame.
Chipped oak, a gas tap, scores of powdered specimens –
the perfect stage for resurrecting my A level chemistry.
I remember this much:
a Nichrome wire dipped in compounds then in fire
bares their truer colours.
It’s a bit like those stars,
the ones you rehearsed on the pebbles at Kemp Town:
the blood in Betelgeuse, Rigel’s furtive blue -
they only show under fiercer, more devoted attention;
you have to inspire electrons if you want to unveil
calcium’s brick-red, barium’s green,
the strange lilac which means simply potassium.
Loyal friends, they return now at my diffident prodding,
make me smug as a sorcerer,
impatient for knowledge of the lone unlabelled jar.
Reveal yourself, sweet familiar, I whisper to glass
before I’m blinded by the white heat
of a magnesium heart.
Posted with consent of the writer.