The WardA Poem by John1
The Ward
Part One
I I’ve got cancer of the spirit, I was born in stage 4, Smelt a rat from the beginning And never asked for more, Yet have joined the mermaids gasping With walrus on the shore.
II
Gasping at the idle sailors Who tell tales round the mast Of a boat that is as pickled As the dogs who hold fast To what is dredged from memory, Curators of the past.
III
I’ve been to this other country, The seven drunken seas, Where names and hearts that have been scored On underwater trees Are what remain, and may endure, Of mariners’ memories.
IV
Winds tug the hull and movement stirs A sodden reverie: The ship is going no where yet The talk’s of what to be. Tomorrow’s crew will chase fireflies Across a sober sea.
V
I take to task this idle crew, Admonishing it thus: The universe is not so much Indifferent to us As we, as humans, are to it, Alive, incurious.
VI
Along the shoreline I once roamed Come others in my stead. It’s difficult to say from here Who leads and who is led, Except to say they come in pairs, The bi and quadruped.
Part
Three
VII
With memories of primal man As flotsam on the shore, The sea lion is a king of sorts Though no one’s heard him roar, But merely bark while steering past The scraps of sail and oar.
VIII
A merman in fantastic depths To sleeping mariner, He goes in search of shoals of fish For he’s no scavenger, And finds them feeding on the wreck Of a sunken treasure.
IX
They scatter in a burst of light; So illuminated, The vessel is a startling sight, Alien, transmuted, From wreckage resting on the floor Into tree uprooted. © 2020 John |
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Added on June 29, 2020 Last Updated on June 30, 2020 Author |