from The Familar Dead
6
The connection’s late by an hour.
Yet you're afraid to explore
the pretty town, to stray
too far from the station. You've
cut
your hand without noticing. You sit down
on a flaking bench.
When was the last time you were
touched? The laughter from the station bar,
the slap of card on table, are closer
when you shut your eyes. The same
words keep being repeated,
their meaning out of reach.
7
Concentrate on the architecture,
not the sickness, things to make
and mend. Yet it’s difficult
to know where you are when
the concision of guidebooks only adds
to the feeling of lostness.
You cannot or will not go
home. For almost every
corner or porticoed street
there’s a journey through thick
grey air, a face without
a name at the end of it.
8
On the crowded tram, the accidental
touch of a hand is enough
to pinpoint your loneliness.
You grow open at the mouth.
The city is an endless thread
you cannot stop unravelling.
Shadows on the street are pared
away. Each face becomes
beautiful and impossible
seen through a moving window
like dolls waving bright
paper flowers and flags.
(Sections 1-5 available on Stride.)
Copyright
© Ian Seed, 2007
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