The museum of the thing
By mcmanaman
- 975 reads
'I'm thinking of putting my bed
into the spare room and everything from the spare room
into my bedroom' you said
in lieu of an acceptance speech.
You hadn't been expecting to win the award
you'd been drifting off all night thinking
about where you sit when you're writing things.
In Colorado there is a museum that's an exact replica
of your front room.
The paintings on the walls. The wobbly TV stand.
The badly painted skirting boards.
Your friend Simon saw it on his honeymoon.
He still went even though the wedding didn't go ahead.
'Maybe there's a replica of your front room in a museum somewhere'
I say to Simon in case he feels left out. We're sitting in my front room
or maybe in that museum in Colorado.
It's hard to know for certain sometimes.
He tells me there are paintings that have been in his family for generations.
They're all at his cousin's house
who lives just across town but they've never met
although he has been past there on his bike sometimes.
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Comments
So many wonderful ideas here.
So many wonderful ideas here.
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'It's hard to know sometimes'
'It's hard to know for certain sometimes' - this line seem key to a poem that appears to be full of people and clutter and often confused contact and alienation. Are objects our only real evidence because they are more solid than words? But we make our words(insofar as we speak them ourselves) and people, usually who we don't know and who work in factories, make our household objects, our 'lares and penates'
Thought - provoking in - it's own way.
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