Long Exposure Magazine Issue 3, July 2016 | Page 9

Two Poems by Jane Rogers

Freeze Frames

after Still Life: Inside the Huts of Scott and Shackleton, photograpy by Jane Ussher

In iced light. The huts.

A windbreak of abrasive textures.

Inside: strewn tables, scientific notes,

darned clothes, fur boots worn out.

Seen from behind the darkroom’s door,

‘still life’s’ preserved by a chewed cold.

Taking in the frozen views

prying the class-conscious, the dark corners,

my eyes rest on motionless packing cases

and hung slats of chivvied shelves:

rough bunks, bedding stiffly folded –

all through this time losing colour.

Framed centre stage,

the jilted banqueting table

spoilt with expedition rations.

Hung in time, a peel of strong smells:

seal blubber, frostbitten tweeds,

pipe tobacco knocked out.

Stacked on galley shelves,

the desolate brands

of provision tins freeze-rusted.

In wide angle, glass bottles,

some stoppered poison, like Mount Erebus

with volcanic plume still breathing.

On the officer’s table, fettered in diaries,

the time gone images of sleds

hobbling through shrieking blizzards

in a clawed drag of animals and men

pursuing the ice-slow

hurry to survive.

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