The Death Suite 7: The Enemy Within
Covers June-August 2025, following the news that I now had measurable tumours, but uncertainty remained regarding how fast they would develop. They were my 'enemy within'.
Images to be provided by the artists shown in red by June 1, 2026. Inserted as received.
* indicates there is a relevant artist statement in the notes at the end. I may add notes of my own at a later stage.
1 Emma Cousin
If life is
just a waiting room
that must mean the main event
is yet to come.
The doctor will see us now…
2 Anne Howeson
Death goes
on
the same as life,
the only difference being
unavoidability.
3 Katarina Rankovic
People say
I’m stoic
but I’ve hardly suffered yet
-
and am happy to wait
to find out if it’s true.
4 Blinky Bellas
Health is
the priority
and yet
if life is just about staying alive,
you might as well not.
5 Alex Baraitser
Yes, you
can kill time
at least for a while.
But when time kills you,
I reckon it’s for good.
Alexandra Baraitser: Upstairs Downstairs, 2023 - Oil on board, 33.5 x 23.5 cm
6 Andy Harper
The main event
is yet to come:
too bad I won't be able
to report on it.
7 Sam Jackson
The benefit of death
is plain:
there’s no need to
be afraid
of dying any more.
8 Jonny Briggs
I guess that’s a
question:
would you – if you had to –
have death
9 Alastair Gordon
In the
event of my demise
'I told you so'
will hardly scratch the surface
of the years of expectation...
Alastair Gordon: Memento Mori, 2022 - oil and acrylic on paper, 30 x 40cm *
10 Berend Strik
Now’s the time
that should-be-dones
might fall away undone -
which is why Steph’s keen that I get
on with them!
11 Cedric Christie
A poem for
the end of time
sounds rather ambitious,
whereas a poem for the end of my time
sounds as humdrum as all the others.
12 Peter Peri
How would
I feel
if ‘sentenced to death’
meant ‘sentenced to life
in eternity’?
13 Sophy Rickett
Having said which
life after death could be an enviable state
like solid air
or marble in full spate.
14 Sarah Pager
I’m not sure that immortality
would be good news…
But being immortal for now
will suit me fine.
15 Aideen Barry
In what we
must take as a post-dualist world
does an afterlife make any sense?
If not, I'll have none of it:
I'm not indulging in an illogical practice.
16 Wanda Koop
According
to Bernard Williams
life would be terminally boring had it no termination.
Wouldn’t it be interesting
to find out if that’s true?
17 Anna Frijstein
I’m having
trouble sleeping
but ‘I don’t think I’m going to get back to sleep’
was the last thing I thought
before I went back to sleep last night.
18 Helena Parada Kim
When I
wake in the night
I like to know the time.
Am I subconsciously worrying
about the timeless world beyond?
19 Gunther Herbst
Sleep in
the world
sleep out of the world…
Is the difference
really worth the fuss?
20 Koushna Navabi
People keep telling me
I look much better
than the last time
they saw me.
Last time, though,
they said that I looked well…
21 Tereza Buskova
Mum complains
that her friends are all dead.
Add that to the list
of displeasures to be denied me.
22 Nadege Meriau
‘Now and
again’
according to Anne Carson,
‘you want to make a poem about death.’
What would she say about all the time?
23 Vicky Wright
Cancer? No problem
It gets me a lot of sympathy.
But symptoms?
I just can’t see the benefit.
24 Liv Fontaine
It isn’t
that I want to be compliant:
necessity is the mother
of acceptance.
25 Chantal Powell
I'm not
quite ready
to go to a place
that doesn't exist –
and not just because it doesn't.
26
Male or
female
black or white, straight or gay?
How come the tide that’s turned against binaries
hasn’t got as far as life and death?
27 Lea Rose Kara
Addiction
to life
is hardly a problem –
but that doesn’t mean
withdrawal won’t be tough.
28 Alex Hudson
Gimme an
L!
Gimme an I!
Well, OK then, if you insist…
Gimme a D.
29 Hermione Allsopp
You think I’m macabre?
Victor Hugo kept one bedroom aside
ready to occupy
only when he was dying.
30 Mary Yacoob
‘Maybe
next year’
has become a commitment I'm happy to make,
chances being I won’t be around
to have to follow through.
31 Susie Hamilton
My bowels
control me
not because all my cancer is bowel cancer,
so much as that its movements
determine the nature of my day.
Susie Hamilton: Moorgate, 2025 - acrylic and charcoal on canvas, 183x170cm *
32 DJ Roberts
Given that
death
will have his day,
I see no harm
in making him wait.
33 Sam Owen Hull
People say
I’m brave
but bravery is a choice,
and I haven’t had
any choices to make.
34 Lana Locke
My new
regime
is stomach ache and sleep.
I can’t think why
I’m following it.
35 Andrea V Wright
Pain is
how
you know you’re alive
when you’re wondering if
you might be better dead.
36 Julie Cockburn
I love
life and
if I change my mind
under cancer’s persuasions
don’t let that count for anything.
Julie Cockburn: Blossom and Peat, 2021 - Hand embroidery and spray paint on collaged found photographs *
37 Nicky Deeley
I’m told
it’s a matter
of ‘when’, not ‘if’ –
something I share with everyone alive
and everyone yet to come…
38 Gretchen Andrew
All I
really know of death
is how to live without it
and I'm not sure that's going to prove
of value for very much longer.
39 Theo Ellison
‘Why me?’
is an illogical question:
my asking it ensures
it could be no-one else.
40 Robyn Lichfield
What do
you call
the dead’s own territory,
now that there’s no heaven or hell?
Is the dead zone simply the cosmos?
41 Sarah Roberts
Steph is
feeling bad today
and that’s not good:
she ought to leave that
kind of thing
to me.
42 Hannah Knox
I guess
there’s nothing else to do
but go on waiting for the miracle
that it would take
for me to believe in miracles.
43
Can I go
on
living this way?
Of course I can:
it’s how I mean to die.
44 Blue Curry
‘Fuck cancer!’
is a sentiment I’ve seen around, and
share.
But has any body worked out
how to do it?
45 Jana Emburey
This is my
twist
on a very old saw:
it must be good that life is going
to leave me wanting more.
46 Fay Ballard
There's
more to life
than dying.
That said, it is an interest
that absolutely everybody holds.
47 Emma Witter
It’s said that death
puts life in context,
but does it? I reckon
it’s the other way around.
48 Dominic Shepherd
Death is the essence
You can refuse to drink,
to eat, to breathe, even to live -
but you can't refuse to die.
49 Holly Stevenson
It's bad
enough feeling
like death warmed up
without it being your body's way
of warming up for death.
50 Marcelle Hanselaar
According to the ludicrous Wilhelm Reich
cancer is caused by sexual inhibition.
Would I dismiss that so readily, though,
were it not too late for an intense campaign to reverse it?
Marcelle Hanselaar: Memento Mori, The invitation, 2025 - etching/aquatint, 20x25 cm plate, 38x43 cm paper, ed. 30.
51 EJ Major
I have no
issue
with the fact of death.
It’s only the timing and the manner
I might like to adjust…
52 Claudia Carr
I eat, yet
still feel desperately hungry
The doctor says the tumour’s press
is mixing up my signals.
I’d like to give it signals of my own.
53 Ruth Fuller
People
think I’ve suffered
I haven’t, much, and here’s the proof:
I’d happily live
the last three years again.
Ruth Fuller: Chatter Chatter, 2025 - oil on board,18cm x 13cm *
54 Wojciech Antoni Sobczynski
‘Bring on the agony!
That’s an experience
I need to respond to…’
is not what I’m tempted to say.
| Wojciech Antoni Sobczynski: Ash Variations I, 2026 – ash, ash on canvas, 45 x 64 x 24 cm * |
55 Elpida Hadzi-Vasileva
Is bowel cancer
the same thing as colon cancer?
If so, I’d sooner avoid the bowel:
for something comes after a colon.
56 Kristian Evju
It’s only
just occurred to me
that ‘nothing lasts for ever’
describes the state of death
with some exactness.
57 Liz Elton
Time to
move on
as I’m reaching the stage
at which chemo seems unlikely
to make me feel worse than I’m feeling already.
58 Sadie Hennessy
It seems
six months
of palliative chemo
will extend my life by about six months.
Let’s hope it’s not the same six months.
Sadie Hennessy: Evening Jacket, 2024 - Mixed Media, 70 x 50 x 20 cm *
59 Troika
I like life
even though it
causes death.
I wouldn't be
without it
for any other
reason.
60 Sara Rossberg
There’s so
much stuff
I want to get done
I'm seriously thinking of being awkward
and simply refusing to go.
61 John Peter Askew
I thank my
tumours
for the chance to engage at a sensible pace
with the coming of death. Just think:
I could have been hit by a bus, and ended none the wiser.
62 Dagmara Genda
This dying
business
turns out to be pretty long-winded:
it’s almost as bad
as living.
63 Liane Lang
Death may
be
the end of thought,
but it’s given me plenty
to think about.
64 Alison Gill
Of
course I want to be there
when it happens –
why miss out on a one-off experience?
–
but now, it seems, I'll have to wait a
while.
65 Dillwyn Smith
So much
speculation
so little substance…
Is it time
I killed my death stuff off?
66 Laura Santamaria
If this is going to be
my last line, I’d better hang on
until the end of the
quatrain
if this is going to
be.
Notes
These poems cover June-August 2025,
following the news that I now had measurable tumours in three places –
mesentery, abdominal wall, and right lung - with suspicions of a fourth in the
bowel. I was having some symptoms – tiredness, stomach aches, back ache,
bowel irregularities – which the doctors said were consistent with the tumour
developments. The tumours were small (in the 1-2 cm range) and not currently
showing signs of rapid growth – when they do, palliative chemotherapy will be
set up. So the tumours were my ‘enemy within’. By the end of this period, they were starting to grow faster.
Steph, I should explain, is my wonderfully supportive wife.
'The main event' - thanks to Anne Howeson
‘Is bowel cancer’ - Punctuation puns
aside, my cancer is of the colon, but my doctors always refer to it as ‘bowel
cancer’. That’s a broad term referring to cancer in the large bowel, which
includes both the colon and the rectum. Essentially, colon cancer is a
type of bowel cancer. Secondary cancers arising from it are all 'bowel cancer', and treated as such.
Notes from artists on their images:
Julie Cockburn: I source old photographs, postcards, and second-hand books from the internet or car boot fairs – found images that I alter using traditional techniques such as hand embroidery, painting, inlay, and screen printing. Here there’s a circularity, if that’s the right word, to both poem and image.
Ruth Fuller: This miniature painting is actually four. Chatter Chatter is the visible work, underneath which are three figurative paintings, like strata, existing unseen. Memories and imaginings, a collapse of thought to invisibility. A search, in painting, for a reflection of something greater.
Alastair Gordon: This was one of a series I made several years ago after the death of our unborn daughter. Something of a meditation on mortality, which seemed to match.
Susie Hamilton: This painting is from my ‘Underground’ series of drawings made on the London Tube. It is called ‘Moorgate’ since its ashen, ghostly nature alludes to the 1975 disaster at the station. I chose it to go with quatrain 31 because the reference to bowels suggested the diluted acrylic paint of the lower body of this figure. The unconfined fluidity of the paint and the quatrain itself also recall Psalm 22: ‘I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: My heart is like wax; It is melted in the midst of my bowels.’
Sadie Hennessy: One night, when the time comes I'll slip into the sea in a gold dress and an evening jacket. Rosemary for Remembrance. Vodka for courage. Nytol for oblivion. Feathers for glamour. Stones for Virginia Woolf... In line with the sense of humorous despair in my chosen stanza.
Wojciech Antoni Sobczynski: Feeling down with personal and political events - feeling
unable to influence the course of even small events - I began to look for a new
colour I could use, which would express the mood I was in. I started
experimenting with ash, looking to find a humblest tonality. That colour combines
with the texture’s fragility, perhaps reflecting my own state of mind. This
is my personal observation on our fragile existence on that great lump called
the earth, hurtling through space.
Holly Stevenson: By the term sticky libido I mean to articulate a sense of hellish confusion, a sort of clinging on to everything and anything in an attempt to make sense/right the self in to a clearer perspective…
References
'Having said which' - I had in mind Edmund Spenser: 'Sleep after toyle, port after stormie seas, / Ease after warre, death after life does greatly please' from 'The Faerie Queene' (Book I, Canto IX), 1590.
‘Given that death’ refers to
Shakespeare’s ‘The Life and Death of King Richard the Second’, Act III, Scene 2
from 1595: ‘Cry woe, destruction, ruin, and decay: The worst is death, and
death will have his day’. It is thought likely – though it isn’t what happens
in the play – that Richard II (1367-1400) was starved to death in captivity
after being deposed by the future Henry IV in 1399. If so, not the way to go…
‘You think I’m macabre?’ The bedroom –
including skull-themed décor and a rather splendid bed - is in Hauteville
House, St Peter Port, Guernsey where Hugo lived (but did not die), from 1856 to
1870.
‘A poem for the end of time’ echoes
Olivier Messiaen’s ‘Quartet for the End of Time’, 1941
‘According to the ludicrous
Wilhelm Reich’ cites the theory set out in ‘The Discovery of the Orgone, Volume
II - The Cancer Biopathy’, 1948.
‘Death is the essence’ –
according to Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) ‘Death is the essence of
life. Life is an approaching death.’
‘All I really know of death’ - love and death are often connected:
Karen Carpenter sang in ‘Goodbye to Love’ (1972), that all she know of love was
how to live without it.
‘According to Bernard Williams’ – in ‘The Makropulos Case:
Reflections on the Tedium of Immortality’, 1973
‘Of course I want to be there’ – Woody Allen’s 1975 play ‘Death’
contains the line ‘It's not that I'm afraid to die, I just don't want to be
there when it happens’.
‘I guess there’s nothing else to do’ refers to
Leonard Cohen’s song ‘Waiting for the Miracle’, 1992 - ‘Nothing left to do
/ When you've got to go on waiting / Waiting for the miracle to come’.
‘Now and again’ - Anne Carson: ‘Martha Going’, 2024.



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