Poem 371
The journey between Wellington and Rotorua is one I’ve made many times and often by myself … this is in the tank-like Hillman Superminx, my first car, given to me by Jill’s father after it had done years of service for him … it became increasingly difficult to urge it up the hills and I can sense my reluctance to stop in case the car doesn’t start again … five hours is that stage at which driving becomes both mesmeric and surreal … am I moving or is everything moving around me? …
( I really like the muffler sitting in the middle of the road as if it’s an offering to the gods as well as being a symbol of some poor unfortunate’s bad mechanical luck … I think I invented the word glassens but I like it … )
Hoping Only To Outrun The Rain
The engine has been on five hours behind me I draw thinly the crackly invisible veil of exhaust I would have died from by now if I'd never left the garage momentum dies on a hill the red wand groaning back behind the day wadded tight in humidity I try to fly like an insect out the black o-mouth of the dead brown centreline muffler offered to someone's journey but ahead in the sky of blistered skin the air glassens around the sun burning further in burning further away torn black rubber shredded tyres of clouds vulcanize in the fields fanning out animals breathe pieces of death and the car ceases its heart attack sounds thudding and missing at the crest of the slope there are only the valleys to go down into already pooling night out of puddles of shadow