Son of My Father
By Ewan
- 612 reads
The grey comes, the fog, the once sharp mind is blunted,
a hunted look is behind eyes of fading blue.
Perhaps he’ll be as blind as Tiresias,
though I expect no prophesy, however arcane,
from his age-slackened lips.
It starts, in parts, in forgotten things
once known by heart;
in the answer no
to shared family myth
and kinfolklore.
How can he rage,
if he does not know the light is dying?
The raging must be mine,
futile though it is.
I look at him and see the future,
he looks at me and sees the past,
though he does not recognise his son.
Who steers, fears
the rocks and dangerous currents
of forgetfulness and oblivion,
of shame and infantilism.
Lash him to the mast,
leave his ears open to the siren,
whose song makes no more sense
than he does.
We are all steering through
the Scylla of senility
and Charybdis’s calamitous infirmity.
There is little hope of landfall
in any kind of Ithaca.
The last vessel is Charon’s ferryboat,
some believe there is another shore,
those who pay, believe in something more.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
I found this poem so moving
I found this poem so moving and a personal reminder of the gradual fading of ones memory in old age, not so much of the past, but of the here and now.
Some astute woven metaphors add to the vividness too.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
My wife and I are facing this
My wife and I are facing this daily, with friends, the wife of whom is now on that journey, with fast developing Alzheimers. It has made us realise that there can be worse things than death.
Dougie Moody
- Log in to post comments
So perceptive, Ewan, and
So perceptive, Ewan, and profoundly moving. I am grateful I was spared this with my parents. Life can be a very cruel lottery.
- Log in to post comments