Christopher Reid, 24 May 2001
“... After Machado Dear common flies, ubiquitous and greedy, how well you conjure up those times that have gone. Old flies guzzling like bees in April, old flies launching raids on my new-born head. Flies of my early homebound boredoms, those summer afternoons when I first learned to dream. And in the hated classroom, flies that whizzed past as we hit out at them for love of their flight – flying being everything – and that buzzed against the windowpanes on autumn days … Flies for all seasons: for infancy and puberty, for my gilded youth, for this, my second childhood of innocence and unbelief, for now and for ever … Common flies, you’re too promiscuous to have found an adequate singer: I know how you’ve dallied on marvellous toys, on the covers of books, on love letters, on the unblinking eyelids of corpses ...”