Tom's Swiss Cure
By Ewan
- 503 reads
Let us take Tom’s Swiss Cure:
look at the mountains beyond the lake
as we come up for the last time, for air
- we dare
to strive, to stay alive, despite
a tragedian’s death-wish
to drown ourselves in the Styx;
to cross Charon’s palm
with a counterfeit obol,
at last
- fast-tied against the mast
like Odysseus listening to the siren song
of mermaids or manatees
[I have heard them and
they have driven me mad].
Bad, as I am inclined to be,
I will not swim in an inland sea
rather fly above it seeking caves
of Al a Dín, Saladín and Bin Ladén
- the evil ones – who find us equally so.
Was there love?
What girl can be a flower? What flower can be a girl?
A water lily? The frog prince sits on a lily pad,
glad of any number of kisses from any princess
or pauper girl selling matches in the gutter.
And all the words,
every one impersonal: see! The very word
contains a clue, every poet is an imp
and the poet is the poem, after all.
Thus we are cured,
of a sudden, as the clock strikes thirteen
and we shall scatter our verses into the wind.
Shan’t we?
Shan’t we?
Shan’t we?
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Comments
I liked the rhymes very much
I liked the rhymes very much in this. Have no idea what it's about - TS Elliot?
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