Poem 482
There’s something satisfying about making this poem speak for the whole year … what even happened in 1987 anyhow? … perhaps this woman has been glimpsed in earlier poems (eg. Poem 5 and Poem 55) … maybe this woman is really me and it’s about a whole day of gloaming … there’s something very evocative for me in an afternoon of thunder …
( I like the image of raindrops on washing and concrete as grey silk spots, the description of washing on the line as a crying flying child … the way you think she’s left the house when she hasn’t … and the hallucinogenic metaphor of driving off a cliff for falling into bed … assonance of ambulance/attending/accident … and the steady frenzy of a Wellington tree in the rising wind … )
1987
An afternoon of thunder grey silk spots on blouses she would tidy the clouds from the sky calm the neighbour's washing like a lost crying flying child she would lug the day like a body down the hall hang it on the hook in the vacuum cleaner cupboard on the corner between morning and afternoon a wounded slice of quiche tomato sauce like a red smashed thumb she takes the car out skittish in the wet and drives off a cliff into her bed pulling the bow at her throat like blood sailing out and down her a last emergency rip cord she looks up and sees failing falling ambulance clouds attending the accident sky rain wind steady frenzy of a tree fighting off night