Tag: Poetry

  • Dim-lit Dust

    Dim-lit Dust

    I’ve been here before, many times in fact,
    I recognise those featureless walls,
    and I remember how those shelves got stacked,
    I recall the dog-eared papers, the sprawls
    of endless thinking, abandoned, let loose
    to yellow by the window; left to fade
    away to nothing; given no more use.
    I remember the decor, overlaid
    with a continuous print of anguish
    and despair, I recall the dim-lit dust
    lounging on the sofa, left to languish;
    lazy sediments form a fragile crust.
    . The blunted pencil and the knife’s dull edge,
    . are sharp reminders of a broken pledge.

    © Tim Grace, 14 November 2011


    To the reader: In a deceased house, the study quickly assumes the patina of abandonment. Without the daily shift of attention piles of paper lose their meaning and wilt under the weight of uselessness. The desk diary, the calendar, and the unwound clock fall behind on duties; with ill-found loyalty they grip tightly to the glory days. Curtains, once daily drawn, become fixed; gone is the regular pattern of a fresh start. It’s dull replacement is dust; sediments of dull dust.

    To the poet: Without descriptive poetry characters have no backdrop; nowhere to convincingly dwell upon the page. It’s interesting that this sonnet has no human inhabitant, it’s about the absence of identity; but it’s all about an inherited character. Familiar features of the stagnating room are traced by the narrator’s reflective gaze. There is movement, but it’s designed not to be intrusive; motionless movement if there’s such a thing. Let the dust settle.


     

    dim-lit dust dim-lit dust

     

  • This Monster

    This Monster

    This monster, this orphan, of Frankensteins,
    he’s taken up residence at my place.
    He’s reconfigured networks and crossed lines;
    broken the system that delivers bass.
    Of his exploits I keep an inventory:
    it includes the toaster, the frying pan,
    the x-box, the iron, the old TV,
    the electric drill and the ceiling fan.
    For the most part he lurks in the shadows,
    turning knobs and flicking the two-way switch.
    Lately, he’s run the pump dry, and who knows
    what’s next – a major blow, a minor glitch!?
    . Might be easier to live in a cave.
    . Think of the tension and money I’d save.

    © Tim Grace, 10 November 2011


    To the reader: Sometimes the frustration of technology dampens all enthusiasm for progress. I’ve always had a bent for tinkering with household gadgets that have achieved their point of built-in obsolescence. Why I haven’t learnt the futility of this pursuit I really don’t know… optimism; that’s too easy. Obligation has something to do with it. My household status rises and falls with the current reliability of switches and circuits.

    To the poet: Around this time, in 2011, with my reputation in shatters I collected together a long list of non-functional household conveniences. Mary Shelley’s portrayal of technology’s fragile relationship with humanity expresses the marriage of wondrous expectation with forlorn disappointment. In this context, poetry can be a useful therapy. With the writing of this sonnet I purged the curse… out went hopeless misery; its replacement: a simple but satisfying final couplet.


     

    this monster
    this monster

     

  • Days in Succession

    Days in Succession

    Already this month’s days are racing by.
    Their natural habit is to rally.
    They are the gatherers that occupy
    tomorrow’s list; their business is to tally.
    Ever restless with ill-content, afraid
    of stoppage, fearful of its consequence.
    They are the marching troop in sevens made.
    They are the breeding ground of incidents.
    Days in succession and weeks in review;
    a bundle of rolling commitments, dates
    in waiting: schedules, rosters, time in lieu;
    such is the tune that chaos orchestrates.
    . Tomorrow comes as once did yesterday.
    . To run this race: ‘respondez s’il vous plait’

    © Tim Grace, 6 November 2011


    To the reader: It might have taken science a millennia to realise time is relative; common sense could have shortened the period of inquiry by some centuries. Nonetheless, we now have some concordance: our perception of time changes according to circumstance; speed and compression do us no favours. The stretchability of time reaches snapping point as the calendar draws to its annual climax.

    To the poet: I have no idea how to speak French or any language other than English. A smattering of high school German has remnant effect but effectively I’m monolingual. Any use of non-English terms and expressions is just a reflection of how my language borrows snippets for nothing more than effect. No doubt the various phrases creep into our day-to-day chatter through the media; phrases become fashionable (trendy) and then lose their currency. I seem to eat in Italian and regulate my time in French.


     

    days in succession
    days in succession

     

  • When Coming Home

    When Coming Home

    When coming home, let there be time to pause.
    Don’t swap the car-keys for door-keys too soon.
    Don’t exchange memories for a list of chores.
    Let the ‘best of album’ play one more tune.
    Before long, home will nag and make its mark;
    craving the fix, demanding attention.
    Just put the car in park, let the dogs bark;
    float a while in a state of suspension.
    Make what you can of now, sit tight, be still;
    leave the seat-belt buckled, don’t do a thing
    that might burst that bubble and cause a spill
    of action: a boot release… a door swing…
    . The estimated time of arrival
    . should accommodate an end that’s idle.

    © Tim Grace, 2 November 2011


    To the reader: You worked hard. You deserved a break. The lead-up was frantic. Exhausted, you began your vacation. The first few days were a blur. Eventually, time relaxed and you shifted your routine to make the most of new surroundings. The weeks away have been all too good. Refreshed, you turn for home. You arrive. The driveway is all too familiar; the same one you greet after a day of work. Exit with care… danger ahead!

    To the poet: Capturing familiar happenings, as common experiences, should be easy; not so. As familiar, the items and activities in a domestic poem have assumed roles. Even the sequence of events requires a predictable story-board. It’s through mundane depictions that this sonnet finds room for curious comparisons; unexpected twists; and misappropriated phrases. A familiar background is a new window.


     

    when coming home when coming home

     

  • Once upon a vine…

    Once upon a vine…

    Between that bottle and this long-stemmed glass
    there lies the story of a summer wine.
    Tells of fermentation, vintage and class;
    begins with friends and “Once upon a vine…”
    They are the golden flush, the rustic hue,
    the straw-like characters in nature clad.
    They are the sparkling stream, the morning dew,
    the autumnal pallet, the harvest had.
    They are the hint of rose, the sweet bouquet,
    the lingering waft of lavender’s scent.
    They are the earthy taste of new-mown hay;
    the essence, the spirit of time well spent.
    . In the pouring of a wine … stop at first.
    . Raise a glass to friends who have quenched your thirst.

    © Tim Grace, 28 October 2011


    To the reader: The pursuit of medieval alchemists was to transmute one substance into another; metals into gold and water into wine. The scientific-age brought an end to alchemy’s legitimacy but we still love to concoct substances. Perfumes and wines are highly prized elixirs that intoxicate our interests. In both, we find beauty in the subtle interpretation of complex chemical relationships. Wine appreciation honours the art and science of wine making; it marries the head, the hand and heart of viticulture into one narrative… raise your glass.

    To the poet: The careful construction of a sonnet allows it to be unpacked by those who care to do so in time to come. With this sonnet’s formal structure comes a more subtle framework; its inner workings. These patterns are evidence of what the poet used to bind and build a consistent narrative. The trick was to convert ‘them’ into ‘they’ and end with ‘those’ to whom we raise our glass!


     

    once upon a vine
    once upon a vine

     

  • Things Constructed

    Things Constructed

    True to the nature of things constructed,
    this place carries well its form and function.
    Bits combine, as by design, instructed…
    “The finished look is a neat production”.
    Its shapes are solid and its lines are clean,
    there’s strength in its statement, poise in its stance.
    It lends stature to an impressive scene…
    “Rightly deserves an appreciative glance”.
    This place is big and at the same time small,
    it’s a place to visit, or to stay a while.
    It’s imposing, robust, yet comfortable…
    “There’s confidence in its sense of style”.
    . This place extends the obvious line of sight…
    . “It stretches shadows as it plays with light”.

    © Tim Grace, 25 October 2011


    To the reader: Wow! – that experience of wonderment upon first encountering a massive interior space – “a primal human response”. From cave to cathedral, those upward rising columns produce the dramatic effect of a vaulted ceiling that with supernatural force separate sky from ground – “heaven from earth”. The statement of interior spaces has a powerful impact on behaviour: in the cavern we intermingle with familial groups; in the cathedral we become one of many deferential souls – “in the modern day shopping mall we are the merchants’ river of gold”.

    To the poet: … waiting for a friend to join me. And so, with time to fill, the interior design of where I was had time to impress my appreciation; it was expansive, generous and interesting. Friend arrives, so I share my thoughts… The conversation lent itself to a poetic form of thought-then-statement (not the same as question then answer). The last couplet neatly thinks-then-summarises.


     

    things constructed things constructed