Blackout by Ross Thompson, written in Bangor during 2020 Lockdown
An eerie sort of shutdown, a form of solar eclipse 
that brings to mind parental stories concerning the Blitz: 
how, at the sound of an ululating klaxon, they hurried 
to the cramped and dank space beneath the stairs, where they worried 
that the sky would fall in an avalanche of planks and bricks. 
You were for so long petrified of being in the dark: 
plagued by nightmares of werewolves, atomic bombs, snakes and sharks, 
and that slow vision of your hometown bleached pale of colour 
where families and neighbours did not speak to each other, 
ring-fenced by silence. No birdsong. No sharing of the heart’s 
longing for reciprocal warmth. Petals shrinking on flowers. 
A faulty circuit board. Lights snapping shut during a power 
cut. And then, that dream actualised, made flesh: cafés, pools, 
cinemas dark as country ditches; hair salons, parks, schools 
empty as cracked pitchers; churches, like unheard signal towers, 
broadcasting to vacant stations; bookstores and restaurants 
a grim tapestry of roller shutters and locked shopfronts. 
Fetching necessary groceries involved a sortie 
of precision planning: a trench run through starless quarries 
where the scent of danger leapt from every surface. Once 
you returned, your uniform had to be burned; your rank, name 
and raid redacted. You were not laid like cards on a game 
table nor arranged like beads in a kinetic cradle 
but jettisoned like pearls from a broken string, unable 
to tether to the thing that held us before we became 
lost in wherever here is… tundra, no man’s land, unclaimed 
ground, ash heap, ghost parade of candles with wavering flames.