February 12, 2013
Tuesday Poem
A Visit
Gone are the days
when you could walk on water.
When you could walk.
The days are gone.
Only one day remains,
the one you're in.
The memory is no friend.
It can only tell you
what you no longer have:
a left hand you can use,
two feet that walk.
All the brain's gadgets.
Hello, hello.
The one hand that still works
grips, won't let go.
That is not a train.
There is no cricket.
Let's not panic.
Let's talk about axes,
which kinds are good,
the many names of wood.
This is how to build
a house, a boat, a tent.
No use; the toolbox
refuses to reveal its verbs;
the rasp, the plane, the
awl,
revert to sullen metal.
Do you recognize anything? I said.
Anything familiar?
Yes, you said. The bed.
Better to watch the stream
that flows across the floor
and is made of sunlight,
the forest made of shadows;
better to watch the fireplace
which is now a beach.
by Margaret Atwood
Posted by Jim Culleny at 06:33 AM | Permalink






















Comments
Great poem. Just to point out typo in 3rd stanza from the bottom in the 2nd word of the 2nd line.
Posted by: Darren | Feb 12, 2013 6:54:55 AM
An unparalleled artist with English.
Posted by: Ken Pidcock | Feb 12, 2013 12:31:31 PM
Thank you, Darren.
Thank you Margaret Atwood
Posted by: Judith Witts | Feb 13, 2013 3:15:14 AM
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