Poem 273
Jumping out of the midst of the hundreds written in 1984 this is pretty much a perfectly structured poem (I think) where form and subject are working seamlessly together – hard to believe I didn’t try to do more with it, even include it in my Original Composition portfolio of that year … maybe I thought it wasn’t the voice I was trying to find and cultivate as a young poet of the eighties, that it seemed a little James K Baxter-of-the-50s-ish, perhaps I was trying to eschew rhyme … whatever concerns of authenticity of style I might have had at the time are long gone, after all the poem embodies my own observation and insight as well as the expression of some serious skills – I just think this is fantastic now …
( I enjoy the loose but confident rhythm and rhyme, the development of the idea through the three stanzas and the closure of the couplets at the end of each one, the set-up and payoff of the sleep till he slept lines, half-rhyme of chorus and service, and how it all seems to be done with a deceptively easy flick of the wrist … and I love the fact that this would have been one of two poems I wrote that day … )
The Popular Man
Self-centred they said as they lowered him down we'd be jumping in after him if he had his way if he was for drinking then no one could stay dry no one could sleep until he slept and no one was safe if they tried he was a cheeky old bastard they said when he died even when he was on the wagon he had to be the one who sat up the front and whipped all the horses along he always told your jokes better you always ended up singing his songs but the crowd went right out to the footpath and down the street you could hear the chorus he'd have liked all this they said at the service but after the funeral they leave him alone and all drive away for a tea at his home and they're all pretty quiet and all looking tired though a send off in style was what was required no one could sleep till he slept and no one is safe now he's died