Hearing and speaking
each in his own language,
we conversed.
His worries seemed too superficial
mine, too vague.
Processing round like riders on a carousel,
we wore strange, painted, poker faces
who'd ridden there
from worlds remote and uncommunicating
who saw,
each in his numbed condition,
nothing of those worlds but what was blurred and faint.
Only our saddled mounts for us were clear:
the swans of hope, the crocodiles of fear.
We were uneasy with each other
for we knew
a day would come when we would find
ourselves
a year apart again - a year
beyond those tight, constraining orbits.
But for a while
the sleepy rise and fall
the organ music
numbed our senses to the world outside.
His flippancy defined the the boundaries of fear.
Strangers for ever, each to each grew plain.
The doors were opened and we never met again.
Uncompromising, clean and clinical,
the corridors stretched out their cold arms
in a kind of welcome.
My clothes seemed inappropriate
conspicuous on my arm
a raincoat hung -
a skin I could not wholly shed.
Forever in the way.
The room was bare and workman-like
arranged with care.
Accomplished artisans with shrewd glance came
and stayed to share
a joke
or move
unhesitatingly, as though
each little crisis had been planned. I watched the slow
continual ripple of attention
build
move to and fro
as if a sea lapped gently on a beach,
grow tall,
and run far up, submerging all...
and then the wind came
turning on its axis
boring like a bit the split sky down the grain
whilst shaving leaves swept past the window in a shower of pain,
The last wave left
and left behind it on the beach
a stranded son.
The deep now out of reach
the dry land strange,
while nature held her breath he fought for his
and won.
Hi Dave, the poem made me very curious, and I thought I'll ask you this question: how is the stranded son related to the protagonist?
ReplyDeleteThat was beautiful - but your eyesight must be much better than mine, as I couldn't read it until I'd copied and pasted your words onto a notebook page that gave me a legible font size!!
ReplyDeleteHaunting!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful - simply beautiful - the end, the last verse is just so so perfect - the perfect beginning!
ReplyDeleteVery enjoyable, i especially like the line "The swans of hope, the crocodile of fear" the first thing i thought of was these creatures are predator and prey, one hoping for a meal the other hoping not to become one :-).
ReplyDeleteHe appears to be a fighter. Great verse!
ReplyDelete"Strange, painted, poker faces...crocodiles of fear" - so evocative.
ReplyDeleteSG
ReplyDeleteHi. No prob. Father and son. This is a redraft of an old poem.
Jinksy
Sorry for the inconvenience, but it should be easier than that. You should be able to adjust the size in your browser. I'm using Opera just now. Not surewhat you have, but if you click on View you should find something there to help. In mine it allows me to zoom, say to 120% or whatever suits.
jabblog
Thanks. That's really good to know.
Rose
That's a very kind response. Thank you for it.
Windsmoke
Ah, isn't the stomach always primary!
kaykuala
Doesn't give up easily, certainly!
jenny
Thank yuo very much. Greatly appreciated.
hospitals are such strange spaces.
ReplyDeleteso glad that he won
intense and scary experience.