The Man at the BackA Poem by David Lewis PagetI don’t remember my grandfather He died, before I was born, And none of the uncles and aunts had kids So I grew apart, alone, Then I overheard my father say It was surely a mystery, So I pressed him then, I wanted to know The family history! He muttered something I’d heard before That sleeping dogs should lie, I thought, ‘You won’t get away with that,’ And I put the question, ‘Why?’ ‘There are things it’s better you didn’t know For they might affect your head, And after all, what use is it, The folk that you seek are dead!’ ‘Let’s say that I’m more than curious Of the line that I’m springing from, I carry their genes and bloodlines So I’d like to know… I’m wrong?’ He told me all he remembered So I wrote down what he said, And then he pulled out the photographs That were hidden, under his bed. I thought that I’d found a treasure trove When I saw those dusty prints, In a box of several hundred There were sepia tones, and tints, There were tiny snaps in black and white There were portraits of a few, From studios in Blackpool, and In Edinburgh, too. But they weren’t in any order, and The backs of some were blank, I recognised quite a few of them Like the ones of my Uncle Frank. But they stared on out from some lost time That had caught a moment’s light, Imprinted its shape on negatives In the tones of black and white. I was only young in those far off days So I couldn’t see, at first, It was as the years went tumbling by I began to fear the worst, For a shadow had formed on many prints, A man in the background stood, He was only faint, like a ghostly taint But he stayed on the prints for good. The man was old, and he stood far off So I couldn’t make out his face, He was there on the beach at Margate, He was sat on a seat in Thrace, Wherever the family went, he was In the background, looking grim, From 1895 and on They couldn’t get rid of him. He started to look familiar In the background of their lives, He’d stare at my old great-grandfathers And stalk their long-ago wives. I asked my father: ‘Who can he be He appears in every shot,’ He said: ‘I told you to let dogs lie, Whether you like, or not.’ He never wanted to look himself He said it had come unglued, ‘Nothing should ever begin before Its time and its date is due!’ I hadn’t wanted to understand, My father in turn had sighed, And then one day in a casual way I heard that my father died. I seemed to age with his passing, then, My hair was suddenly grey, The mirror said I was getting old, And older than old each day. I took the box with the photo’s in And hid them under my bed, ‘You’re looking more like your grandfather,’ My wife in her wisdom said. My son grew up and he came one day To uncover a mystery, He said he wanted to see the prints Of his family history. I said, ‘It’s better you didn’t know, Some things you’d better not see,’ For now, the mirror had long confirmed The man at the back was me! David Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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18 Reviews Added on June 4, 2013 Last Updated on June 4, 2013 Tags: photographs, shadow, taint, history Author
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