Poem 97
Bob Dylan’s box set Biograph was on repeat in my original cassette tape Walkman in the latter half of the eighties … it featured a live version of Visions of Johanna that rivalled the original and only increased my fascination with the rhyme scheme of that song … eventually I wrote a poem with the same structure to see if I could do it – and also borrowed the song’s love-triangle scenario of someone with one partner and simultaneously pining after an ex … Dylan based it on his relationships with Sarah Lowndes and Joan Baez … in my case it was pure imagination …
( yes it’s a bit overwrought – like the song! – but I love some of the imagery here – bored school kids visiting the museum of me, cars like broken marriages in twos and threes, the spin on Oscar Wilde’s ‘looking at the stars’, and particularly the bees in yellow sheets across the ground … then of course there’s the bravura seven-rhymes-in-a-row at the climax … title relates to train of thought as well as the obvious camp connotations at the end … The Sleeping Gypsy is still my favourite Rousseau, had a poster of it for many years … )
Concentration Train
The traffic plays loud through the crevices of a steady rain as shrieking from the air down to the airport drops the late evening plane Carmel inclines her head to a book and a shaft of hair covers the name the record hisses and glitters between songs I think of people I knew when I knew where I belonged about Louise and the unimportance of the difference between stubborn and strong and the way she would stand in the morning deciding what to put on as the fighter that was lust spits out a final tooth as a school party in a draughty room yawns over my youth as still the rain like snakes flickers under the edges of the roof and Carmel sighs and stretches and counts off half her rosary I see Louise hook her shoes across her shoulders inside the white noise of the sea saying I know how hurtful you can be you'll have to learn that you can't hurt me and cars pass like broken marriages in twos and threes there's a murderer whistling on the highway there's a body deep in the lime but where's the point in fishing after it forever with only her throwaway lines? now Carmel wonders what happens to the time she crosses to the calendar and marks a day I didn't leave her she says this boat you're building you should break me on the bow and call it Pleasure she tells me it's not my fault I spent my childhood in the freezer but to next time pick some woman who finds this kind of thing easier in my favourite Rousseau painting the lion eats the gypsy's guitar while the moon rises like a razor blade snail leaving a silver scar I hear Louise talking saying maybe we're all in the gutter but some of us are acting like stars she certainly did impress me when I met her at the Lost And Found I've always believed in second sight at first-hand no matter how unlikely that sounds I was heading out the door with an armful of coats when the sound of her voice pulled me round like I was told the thunder can bring down bees in yellow sheets across the ground it seemed to me then that I boarded the train that stops for the very few whose lighted windows flick by like a film until the lines bend them out of view I still wake up and wonder why she couldn't be on it too you'd be surprised how slow electrocution is just sitting in your favourite chair as Louise dances on the far lash of sight with a choirboy without a prayer and Carmel sleeps beside me dreams crackling out of her hair chimneys rise smoking in the winter air I see the train unload in the floodlights' glare I add my clothes to the mountain in the empty square place my shoes beside a million other pairs and join the line that shuffles slowly toward the trees the iron gate shuts and the inscription reads love love will set you free