Join the Neopoet online poetry workshop and community to improve as a writer, meet fellow poets, and showcase your work. Sign up, submit your poetry, and get started.

Lucidly

There are great gaps in his memory.
Some caused by age and the deluge of booze, to be sure.
Others by repression or indifference.
Some of these gaps can be filled by prompting,
especially those times when he viewed the world like a movie camera,
always expecting the film to run out,
not caring.
He would still walk and talk,
see, hear and do,
it made no difference if it was being recorded.

Today he gets up.
Not particularly tired,
no more than usual.
Just the usual,
not enough sleep,
never enough sleep.
He hasn’t been particularly busy,
it makes no difference anyway.
Always wakes up with too little sleep, not deep enough,
or a massive hangover.
Only those two options.

It doesn’t show.
Oh, you can see he is tired.
But you can’t see if there is film in the camera.
He showers, dresses,
makes breakfast of a crispy bacon sandwich on crusty white bread,
with tea.
Eats it reading something,
it could be anything.
But still he smiles,
occasionally.

On his way to his job
there is fog,
the cables of the bridge disappear skywards,
skyhooks!
He grins,
lucidly.

 

 

 

— weirdelf, Jul 17, 2007

About This Poem

About the Author

Region, Country: Sydney, Australia, AUS

Favorite Poets: The Romantics, The Mersey Sound, The Beats and, of course, The Bard

This user supports Neopoet so it can be free to all

More from this author

Critiques

H

HDGoodman

18 years 10 months ago

an old 70's photograph, out of focus. musty smell.

cheshire jess, why do you keep describing my life back to me? listening to radiohead whilst reading this helped. what is the point of this guy's life? what is the point of my life? to paraphrase sartre, it's a void blurred by it's own perspective. impossible, beautiful, cloudy and unrecognisable exept for a few blunt, indefinite faces. this is how we live, this is how we live. i followed it all the way through, with familiarity. thanks. Harry Dryden.
P

poet_inside

18 years 10 months ago

I loved the discription as

I loved the discription as well as the simple smile that seemed to make all of his life worth while. ( well to me anyways) Very good work!!!! Brittany Rae
C

Conect11

18 years 10 months ago

I read this at work

several hours ago. Apologies for not posting too many comments lately, have been swamped. The power of this is striking in its subtlety. This poem doesn't knock me over the head, it is far greater than that. It has a quiet progression and that sadness of real life that makes it so poignant. I can see muted colors, and an old phonograph. And a longing, disconnected desperation for life. This touched me because I've lived it, I've felt it. I guess I could have given you far better praise by simply saying "This poem is relevant." Mark
S

stardream

18 years 10 months ago

lucidly

yum, maybe i will have a bacon sandwich for breakfast...this poem describes well the boringness of 9-5...good one!
I

IKnowNoBox

18 years 7 months ago

routine is killing me

extrordinary can kill me to,purdition may not be that bad a choice after all,a waste land starts the journey after going through the static... if the soul is light enough then one may fly over the barren void,I saw the passing souls, a blur in the mist of fading reality,before I was called back i knew i would have to walk a long way to get through it if I choose to pass.once I determined that i knew I needed to lighten up.I resolved my grudges ,and have done my sentance without luxeries I seek not salvation or redemption I seek only to be illuminated for a journey across the next time i am there.for now i have a second chance to do the same thing only better this time around .Yes I will settle for content routine. Lucidly, Dabbler ps there is a song by a group called "Modest Mouse" "All the Stars are Projectors...Each one reflecting Life Down To this Planet Earth" It is a sound track for your poem....
RSScheerer

RSScheerer

18 years ago

photography in black and white

Procession of an hour, a day, a life ... slowly falling into routine, never stopping to wonder how it happened. Even in the mundane, we stumble upon random moments of clarity. Nicely written, Jess. Best, Ronda