Poem of the week Kist

حوالي ٤ سنوات فى The Irish Times

Tall trees are a hymnal even slight winds know by heart, and stars and traffic, between them, remind me I’m not alone or at least not any more alone than stars and traffic are. Mornings are writing; afternoons, repairs. That seems to work. Nights are a chair for reading about places other than here. From time to time I open the blue door to ask the world, What’s up? Mostly, the world replies, Oh, you know. And I do: it could be worse.
I wake in a lean-to bedroom modelled on a casket with a window at the foot. I prefer to call it a kist, of course I do, with the knapsack of age-old innuendo that word carries on its back. Coffin and coffer, lipped and tongued; the box I climb into and out of again every time I write a poem.
Today’s poem is from Vona Groarke’s new collection, Link: Poet and World (The Gallery Press)

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