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Childhood deceives, Adulthood bereaves. |
----- .a foreword. This was my entry to GRIST 2009, a poetry competition and eventual compendium being judged by Joanne Harris and Simon Armitage. I'm not sure when we are made aware of what's included and what's not! This poem is extremely personal, and the closest I feel I've got in encapsulating the dreams and whims of my childhood while comparing them to the relative solemn normality of my adulthood. I used to live in a row of terraces in suburbs cased in by a small forest, and a railway line which ran through it. You could see the line to Harlow from my window, and you'd hear it every hour. This poem is dedicated to that unique, idiosyncratic experience, and how I'll never get it back. ----- ten years ago today ...trains flew through my neighbourhood. in my room cacophonies of speed, orchestrations of efficiency but for ten seconds, and for every hour. each train a machine, an angel from the city slicing through the wind, storming through the peace we thought we'd cultivated. i would grow accustomed to her storms, but never bored. grinding herself up through the forests and the trees that thicketed my brick igloo from the silver city beyond the suburb. i would get there, she contested. the train was an omen of wistful promise ever-present, ever-visiting, flinging fleeting glances at a future to come a future i wanted so hard, and so passionately, and dack, dack, dack the train moved on. that ten second glimpse of glory pressed hot, and hard, into my young heart. like fists of pressure into a rubber tectonic; sweet, rounded drops of acid that singed the most supple of skin, but saluted the scent of a locked Utopian powder-box. beyond experience, unfiltered, unseen. undreamed, unrealised, unimagined. the angel from the city beyond, when she called would whisper to me, as loud as she bellowed to unwinch me from the real just to pay audience come night, she tore a gale through standing water; a booming moon, shattering into a slumberous, monolithic earth sneaking beyond the silence of nature’s foot-soldiers, pushing and pounding softened steel kaleidoscopes of anticipation until i happily cried myself to sleep. things change. funny, really. i only remember her now, ten years since our last goodbye since i'm coming to terms with her lies. |