This is another poem that turned up unexpected and wrote itself over the course of a couple of days.
I always find it interesting when that happens. This time I was lying in bed, Sunday morning, when the first line appeared. I got up and jotted it down as it arrived.
MAPS
On
wet days, before he truly went blind,
my
father in half moon spectacles,
would
get down his maps,
unfold
them on the kitchen table,
his
fat finger tracing familiar trails,
he
would one day take,
over
this mountain, across that moor.
He
talked the big picture but noted the details,
as
I lost myself in the creases,
in
the crevasses of the folds
I
dreamt my own dreams.
The end they said, was a cigarette,
of
course I arrived too late,
after
the fire, those all consuming flames
that
ate my father and all his rooms.
The
day after I raked through the ash,
not
expecting to find anything
and
I did not.
These
days I use a phone screen,
content
for an algorithm to dictate my route,
which
takes no note of altitude or contour,
battle
site henge or tumuli.
I am not sure I believe the relationship between the narrator and his father. Much, I think, is unsaid. I shall share it with the Secret Poets and see what they make of it.
When a poem wants to be written you have to write it even if you do not understand it. Hopefully that comes over time.
I have a soft spot for Catalan pop.Here's Sau from 1991.
And here's Sau playing their other hit, El Tren de Mitjanit.
I have been working on this post's poem for some time and I am still not sure it works. The basic premise is that a character in a story can live forever in the minds of those that read their tale.
I had been thinking of the Epic of Gilgamesh, the world's oldest recorded story. Of how the hero, Gilgamesh, lived first in the mouths of the story tellers then in the heads of those who read of his life.
Epic
After
the sacking, the final fall,
abandoned
in Nineveh's library
there
had been a time of nothingness,
not
quite pitch black, unfeeling for sure.
Stasis,
he later learned while lodged in a head
rubbing
shoulders with new concepts.
It
was all so different from being on the lips,
in
the thoughts, on the tongues of story tellers
his
tale, his epic spoken of and retold
all
across the then known world.
He
had lived in their minds
each
time his legend was told,
recreated
in each consciousness
for
the length of time they listened,
appreciated
his dilemmas.
Then
he had not realised those clay tablets,
patiently
pressed cuneiform
would
bestow the immorality he craved,
would
convey him into the future
this
everlasting now he lives in
each
time someone reads his history.
I think I need to work on the poem some more. What do you think?
Yesterday a friend sent me a video of The Boxtops singing The Letter, splendid music
I have been polishing the poem for this post all week. This is unusual. I tend to write them and leave them alone for a time. This one demanded attention. Possibly because the narrative thread needed to be very clear.
the hanging man
the
wallpaper will not hang today
reprieved beauty unseen
as
it has been these past two Saturdays
it
is the hangman, the handyman
who can turn his hand to all the things I cannot
whose
future dangles by a thread
his
disbelieving wife
long
his sternest critic
has
finally had enough
he
stands in what is now her hallway
stuffing
thirty years of life
into
black plastic bags
I think that the narrative is clear. The breakdown of a relationship, wallpaper that is not put on the wall, the handyman packing his life into bags. Your thoughts, as always, welcome.