The Frozen Man
By harveyjoseph
- 634 reads
It happened
at first only intermittently
He would stop, going through a doorway,
or, as he'd closed the door of the bathroom,
as if he'd stepped in treacle,
stuck like a fly on fly paper
unable to fly.
The glitch would reconfigure and
he'd switch back on,
the malfunction seemingly gone,
but it was not.
The moments would become more
than moments,
Time pulled out like a piece of clay
and moulded into stone.
His eyes flickering like
a paused image on a screen,
of a tragic hero standing
alone.
Then one day, in the hallway,
he stopped in mid stride,
completely. He juddered for a moment
and was still.
We tried to force feed him pills,
put a hand on his shoulder,
and talk to him in soothing tones,
but to no avail.
We wept, bereft at he who
was still here but
had left. We told him we
loved him but he showed
no signs of understanding.
We grew angry, shouting at
this statue who had robbed us
of something and then
his numbness surrounded us
like an army, and marched
on our very selves.
Our anger and sorrow fell away
to irritation at having to walk around him,
in our day to day lives.
We tried to move him,
but he wouldn't budge...
We drew on the advice of professionals,
but nothing seemed to work.
The shadow, this frozen
man remained and to him
we felt chained. We tried to sell
the house, but obviously no one
was biting. When we had viewings
they seemed frightened,
even though we assured them
that there was
nothing
to be frightened of.
Time passed like
a train and he remained,
so that we almost pretended he wasn't
there until our pretence
made this absence true.
What else could we do?
He was not dead but
invisible, a chalk outline that
we learnt to step around.
We walked out to work on Summer mornings, not
seeing anything and returned
in the dark on Christmas Eve,
blind to the indifference.
We'd grown old
in a blur and the oldest died;
the funeral unlocked something
inside. A voice and we did not know
whose it was.
Sat at the table, we thought it was a ghost,
until at the door,
stood the frozen man,
staring at us
and waving his frozen hand.
And we did not understand,
but broke down
and pleaded with him
why?
He laughed in sadness to some other self,
stretched out his arm and pointed in the distance,
whispered something we could not make out
We, reaching for his shadow
that fell across the room,
like water that was slowly melting...
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Comments
What a great poem you've
What a great poem you've written here. This solitary figure of stillness, an almost spiritual being. Very Imaginative.
I found it both mysterious and captivating all at the same time.
Jenny.
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