Endurance
By Philip Sidney
- 5181 reads
Sisyphus knew
daily endurance
how absurd, the behaviour of living.
Plastic handles cut off the blood
6 bags of tins, why tins?
lugged along the long, long walk,
all on a fag and a strong cup of tea.
Stop for a breather, instant relief,
did Fiennes ever stop?
The children run on,
more of a Shackleton, shepherding them,
‘Spirits up kids, treats when we’re in’.
Lifts her Thor Heyerdhal face
into the wind,
deflects the ‘Cheer up love’
of leering sharks
with ‘stop at the curb, look left then look right’
pretends not to hear, ‘want another, love’, sneer.
Not far now, the brow of the hill,
calves flexing, feet slipping in old Dr Scholls,
lungs wheezing, twilight shift later -
never mind the cotton lung -
she can do this, she must do this,
she does this
again.
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Comments
That's a piece of "resistance
That's a piece of "resistance", Philip! Powerful again and very well crafted. Like it!
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Perfectly portrayed -
Perfectly portrayed - pressing on with nothing but forced determination and endurance. I felt it all in the no words wasted running flow from start to painful finish. And that she will have to do the whole thing again, is implied in the last, most important word.
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It must go on and you can
It must go on and you can feel it in each word. An urban take on an old myth. Should there be a 'to' between 'not hear' or is it stylistic. Sometimes I'm a gimp, Philip.
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I liked the Dr Scholls ref.
I liked the Dr Scholls ref. They grip better going uphill.
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Hi Helen
Hi Helen
I'm puffed from just reading it. Great poem.
Jean
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Also liked the vivid picture
Also liked the vivid picture of the return with the heavy plastic bag and the kids, with mix of the myth and the explorers intertwined. Rhiannon
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