ANNA MARIA DALL'OLIO
THE ASTRONAUT’S DREAM
Last night I dreamt dreamt &
dreamt
Floating floating floating around
wading the wide wide universe
no more was the Earth encircled by
confusion
stalked by war
raped by division
what I simple soul could see &
hear
so different minds in total
consensus
such various qualities in perfect
identity
so complementary colours in total harmony
so many hearts beating in perfect
unanimity
what I simple soul could barely
think
all this clear homogeneousness
all this sheer oneness
all this definite sameness
is it not the reason for final union
for permanent indivisibility
is it not the best solution to so
divided mankind?
HEART OF GLASS
See such hands folded exactly
glass & the colour of sunshine.
Face, wrinkled like wrought wood,
fire, white like stars.
A single stroke, a single bump,
tells her years of very stubborn
work
rolling around her only art
ribbons tied across her lonely
heart.
her neck blows like her husband’s
blowpipe
the pipe at the back of the room
where she spent so many long, long
nights
watching him work by heart.
Your eyes wonder & wonder:
to her the ever most sparkling
bubble belongs.
The man of her dreams came true:
she caressed that glass, the
hottest mass.
Fire, white like stars,
Face, wrinkled like wrought wood.
See such hands folded exactly
glass& the colour of sunshine.
YOU WERE NINETY
You were ninety, you fell asleep so
soon.
Your fierce smile roared through
the house,
Such saucy words & starry eyes.
We cannot wonder why, oh why.
We miss your wild, wild reproaches,
How you spread strength when all
around was so weak.
We miss your awful efforts to
protect us so.
Why, why did you want to go?
We really miss your harsh, harsh
voice
quarrelling with your outdated
typewriter.
We miss you smoking & shouting.
We cannot wonder why, oh why.
We miss the stories you told us
together,
spilling milk in the sink, driving
Mum mad,
your new tie forgotten on the desk.
Why, why did you need to go?
We both love you, Daddy. Now it is
terribly clear
we can do nothing to have you back
here,
we just can’t see why life is so
sunless & sad.
ANNA
MARIA DALL'OLIO
No comments :
Post a Comment