Spectator poems
From the magazine

Knowledge Revises

David Page
EXPLORE THE ISSUE January 19 2026

It’s too late now to say you are not old,

the years gang up on you, they settle down

like locusts falling on a field of grain,

the rustling noise you hear, that is their sound.

How to be old: I’ll help you on the way.

Stand straight. Be calm. Pretend you are a tree

Speak like a tree, only speak slow and clear.

Speak only once. If words should scatter

flashing their tails before they disappear,

temporise, change the subject, no great matter –

Enough, wrong tone: meaning to make amends

should not have used this hieratic patter

knew from the start that half I said was wrong

pitching it for that By-Our-Lady play

And yet, which half was false and which was true?

After all, here am I, but where are you?

Maybe a small charade would help: let’s see

I set you on a wide and marshy plain

Light fades: no constellations come in view

Briefly a fire-fly spark, a marsh gas flare –

No marsh-bird croaking in the darkening air…

Does that come some way near, or am I wide?

I mean to help, and yes, I’m by your side.

But you don’t meet my gaze or raise your head

— I don’t believe you’ve heard a word I said!