as a measure of time,
tables - use old wood to build them,
or poems that i scratch out;
the tables aren’t much.
just made a small one
to hold my keyboard nicely,
the computer keyboard,
not the piano.
the piano sits well enough already
on the floor in the other room
where it ought to be,
like you, like me,
in place where we ought to be.
can i measure time building tables,
make a clock of it? there are pictures
to paint, engravings to do, and writing, eh.
all comes from within like breathing country air
and i let it out as it happens.
need i direct it more, control
and make a neat scene
or continue to write poems at random,
then build something,
paint something,
read or write when it happens?
at least, at most,
i am happy about it,
like life in the city
and many people to talk with;
what they do is their affair.
i keep head down with what i do,
although she has mentioned that
we don’t need another table.
rising early in the morning
in stillness, alone,
far trains passing
clocks ticking, tripping silence.
Sunday, May 02, 2010
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1 comment:
I wrote something last night comparing time to a turn of a page, and our lives, to a book. (It may not be original, but it felt fresh to me.)
Re: the question in your poem, I vote for being eclectic- writing, painting, building, in the many ways that creativity and emotion expresses- and you've answered it within your own poem:
"at least, at most,
i am happy about it,
like life in the city
and many people to talk with;"
Your final stanza could be the beginning of a new poem. I love the concluding line: "clocks ticking, tripping silence."
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