At the Arts Council in Manchester
By ralph
- 4856 reads
And to think I was just about to complain
About the weakness of the coffee when
my head turned through the glass to
witness the hearse arguing in traffic.
It was a standoff for sure. I knew this when
death itself gave up its ghost to breathe beside
me awhile, to show patience. There was no rain,
wind or violins. England will never be mine.
A gold coffin the size of a malt loaf, vibrating
with the anxiety of the driver’s peddled footwork,
the cortege behind damming the day to wails.
Grief as performance art said a colleague.
The ghost recounted the story of how I had a sister.
Things would have been better, it whispered.
She had a name, Teresa, she was older than me,
lived three days, it’s all mathematics, apparently.
What would my parents have talked about
on that morning of the funeral? Would they
have held hands, was the radio on? I’ve always
hoped for love on the settee through the tears.
The ghost sipped my coffee, made a face
of disdain. The hearse pulled away to Piccadilly,
a parade to disbelief. I returned to my
meeting, the one about tangible outcomes.
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Comments
I love how this mixes the
I love how this mixes the mundane with the profound. Startling and deeply moving.
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This wonderful poem is our
This wonderful poem is our facebook and twitter pick of the day! Do share if you like it too.
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Quite possible how can you know?
Quite possible how can you know? Fronn the rocking of the cradle to the rolling of the hearse.
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Thoughtful
A thoughtful and aptly crafted piece
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I found this very moving, the
I found this very moving, the little buried things that shape your life unearthed suddenly.
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You are on a roll Ralph! This
You are on a roll Ralph! This is our Poem of the Week - Congratulations!
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This is our Poem of the Month
This is our Poem of the Month - Congratulations!
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I like the compact structure
I like the compact structure of this, rhythms and quatrains and words that almost rhyme containing a story of movement between the past and here and now and might-have-been -the drama of the baby's hearse in front of you springboarding your thoughts spliced with the words of others. I also have a missing sibling, a brother four years before me who never lived. IMO 'stillborn' is the creepiest word in the English language.
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