Tail-end
By Parson Thru
- 20150 reads
Rain hisses on the balcony
and the air smells fresh
Thunder rolls around the roofs
Eight hours since I finished class
and tomorrow all-but free
It’s the tail-end
The last days going into summer
I just restrung the flamenco one
and set it down to relax a while
Every action is a lesson in life
An hour spent tying nylon ends
In the street
a woman peels a parking ticket from her screen
and holds it like a dead baby
Jaw-dropped in disbelief
She backs against the wall
Forlorn gaze, first up the street
then down
But there’s no one to upbraid
I pour myself a drink, remembering
that water is for thirst
and wine for pleasure
Scrub out a short Dylan tune
on the steel-strung one
Two thousand miles east
my love moves me in mysterious ways
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Comments
another great slice of life -
another great slice of life - thank you parson!
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Wonderful! You create vivid
Wonderful! You create vivid moments with such simplicity. G & T is good for both...
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This wonderfully evocative
This wonderfully evocative poem from ABCtales' consummate travel writer is our facebook and twitter pick of the day. Do share if you like it too.
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Oh this flows beautifully and
Oh this flows beautifully and effortlessly it's a delight to read.
Sort of reminded me of one of those old TV detective programmes (American) where the cop tells the story Mickey Spillane and all that just needed the smoke filled room and the hat they always wore:)
Riveting piece of writing.
Pops ~xx~
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Ha, ha funny - hope your fag
Ha, ha funny - hope your fag did not fall out.
Pops ~xx~
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Love this, especially the
Love this, especially the woman with the parking ticket. Made me feel a bit jealous of the person in the poem(you?); I could really do with being 'all but free' and a big thunderstorm would be lovely.
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It's nice to be unhurried and
It's nice to be unhurried and relaxed, watch the world go by.
Like Jane said, I do so wish for a thunderstorm to freshen the air. I need reviviing and those first three lines were refreshing to read.
Jenny.
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This is our Poem of the Week
This is our Poem of the Week - Congratulations!
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Congratulations. I liked this
Congratulations. I liked this, it has the pace of someone sitting back in a chair on a veranda. I like how you are writing easily and feeling surprised by that. Probably the way we write best is the one that comes naturally so just go with it and see what comes.
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Well deserved POW, keep
Well deserved POW, keep coming back to it, it's the easy narrative style - hot knife through butter.
Pops ~xx~
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Striking
Damned enjoyable. The narrator as alienated observer, is crafted well. A sense of this pervades. Though at an uneasy peace with a culture and heat to which he does not belong, he yet observes in practice, and masters local pleasantries. Again that distance marked through his craft, seperating out the instruments on which to sharpen his worldplace and harken to his heart, while noting the universality of bureaucratic horrors.
Like, like and like :)
Lena xx
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Good poem from start to end.
Good poem from start to end.
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One thing you will
find by doing this, is that your description in any prose you do write will be tighter, more compact, more effective, it's something I was told would happen if I wrote more poetry. I'm not completely sure it has for me, but it will for you.
Keep that notebook filled with this stuff that just comes, just like that, apparently easily: you can thank reading, observation and just plain daring to write things down.
best
Ewan
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This is our Poem of the Month
This is our Poem of the Month - Congratulations!
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well done mate. great poem
well done mate. great poem and wiinner of poem of the month, deservedly so.
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