Out Of Focus
By harveyjoseph
- 551 reads
Fumbling with the
back of what would become Mum's
camera-case, you expose the
film to the
light, accidentally, your first awkward
brush with the 'Art Of Photography' we are told- wiping
out images that she
captured, until you set them
free, unintentionally...and spent
the next few decades trying to
get them back again.
Once you got going, and we'd successfully come out, a technician
then teacher, you let us in to
the dark room (of your soul)
boys with toys: a plastic dinosaur, a
colt 45 cap gun; a matchbox car.
We laid them out like offerings,
a sacrifice to your
growing God,
on the precious paper,
wth the light off and the light on,
into the developer, the fix, the wash of the wave
that brought the spectral echo of their prayer back to
us, saved; stored on this black and white shore
in an age before the digital hoard.
I remember that mug, one of your grateful students
bought you at the 'End Of Term'.
Photographers Never Die They Just Go Out Of Focus...
A joke that scared, still scares us.
Once you woke us up in the night, just
because the light was right,
and sat us on a chair by the window
bleary eyed, in Addison Road,
the streetlights in the background
over exposed, if that's the right word,
who knows? You know.
Albums of holiday snaps winding on, black and white shots at Birling Gap
after Bill Brandt, the layers of sedimentary rock
as a backdrop.
I remember when we were older, Tom's negatives hung up, getting stuck
in the doorway in a freeze frame, but
the only one of us to come away with
any understanding of depth of field, apertures and shutter speeds.
We didn't understand quite what it all meant, until now...
Shadow and light.
You put off treatment, until after your entries had been
accepted, printed framed and delivered.
We shivered with worry, but that night
in the gallery, a private view,
with my new born daughter,
I'm staring across at you, as they
hush to make the announcement - and
pronouncing your name, the applause, in
complete focus, the moment is yours
What you'd overexposed and lost was
recaptured, and outside
the sun went down and there
wasn't a frown.
Ascending to the gallery, your first prize, a
first prize, a silhouette of the daughter
who came after, through the canvas
of a hired wedding marquee,
the dark shadows of branches splayed out
around her profile,
framed by faded bunting.
Hope shines through a pin hole
and with your winnings, through a new lens,
you zoom in and move on, and out of focus
comes love...
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Comments
Very nicely captured. Had a
Very nicely captured. Had a smooth flowing prose-like quality to it.
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Filled with love and
Filled with love and admiration. There seems a feeling of threat as well as hope. Great poem!
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