rejectomorph (
rejectomorph) wrote2023-06-17 08:37 am
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Reset Forty-Nine, Day Twenty-Four
Multiple Friday sleeps and then waking very early Saturday morning not quite sure where I was. My new table lamp reminded me. I had dreamed about my cats, but the details of the dream evaporated quickly, which left me sadder than usual on waking. It was still dark outside, and I tried to get back to sleep for about an hour and failed, so I got up and, as it still seemed too early (too dark) for breakfast, and it had been a long time since dinner, I microwaved a bowl of ramen. Now time seems as deranged as I am. Maybe it will work out later. Maybe I'll sleep some more. Maybe I'll just forget I'm here.
Sunday Verse
by Derek Mahon
I have abandoned the dream kitchens for a low fire
and a prescriptive literature of the spirit;
a storm snores on the desolate sea.
The nearest shop is four miles away —
when I walk there through the shambles
of the morning for tea and firelighters
the mountain paces me in a snow-lit silence.
My days are spent in conversation
with deer and blackbirds;
at night fox and badger gather at my door.
I have stood for hours
watching a salmon doze in the tea-gold dark,
for months listening to the sob story
of a stone in the road, the best,
most monotonous sob story I have ever heard.
I am an expert on frost crystals
and the silence of crickets, a confidant
of the stinking shore, the stars in the mud —
there is an immanence in these things
which drives me, despite my scepticism,
almost to the point of speech,
like sunlight cleaving the lake mist at morning
or when tepid water
runs cold at last from the tap.
I have been working for years
on a four-line poem
about the life of a leaf;
I think it might come out right this winter.
Sunday Verse
The Mayo Tao
by Derek Mahon
I have abandoned the dream kitchens for a low fire
and a prescriptive literature of the spirit;
a storm snores on the desolate sea.
The nearest shop is four miles away —
when I walk there through the shambles
of the morning for tea and firelighters
the mountain paces me in a snow-lit silence.
My days are spent in conversation
with deer and blackbirds;
at night fox and badger gather at my door.
I have stood for hours
watching a salmon doze in the tea-gold dark,
for months listening to the sob story
of a stone in the road, the best,
most monotonous sob story I have ever heard.
I am an expert on frost crystals
and the silence of crickets, a confidant
of the stinking shore, the stars in the mud —
there is an immanence in these things
which drives me, despite my scepticism,
almost to the point of speech,
like sunlight cleaving the lake mist at morning
or when tepid water
runs cold at last from the tap.
I have been working for years
on a four-line poem
about the life of a leaf;
I think it might come out right this winter.