I'm dusting off one that some of you have seen before.
It came to me on a routine visit to the doctor's office ... I was, indeed, perched on the end of an examining table ... waiting ... and watching the rain.
Then I reached for the folded scrap of paper I always carry in my hip pocket, and started writing.
"At the Doctor's Office" was originally published in Potpourri, was subsequently nominated for Pushcart Prize honors, and is now part of a manuscript in search of a publisher:
AT THE DOCTOR'S OFFICE
Random needles of rain
start darting diagonally
like the silent scratchings
of cat claws on the window
where the traffic is zooming
and sizzling past, hauling
away the remains of Thursday,
blurring beyond the sycamore,
its mottled gray-green trunk
whispering of a deep-forest
stream while seeming utterly
misplaced here where concrete
suffers the presence of so few
trees, where my strongest
efforts at contiguous thought
produce only fragments too tiny
to mend, unleavened images,
lacking all savor of meaning,
where I perch, dry-mouthed
and nervous, my legs dangling
from the end of this table,
and wait, as I always do,
for a door to open softly,
carefully, into this silence,
this sterile, stifling silence.
© 2001
***
Today's word:
needlesAfterthoughts ... in response to your comments:
Thank you, Magran. I'm glad you felt that the poem put you there, sitting on the examining table, watching the raindrops slanting across the glass of the window. When that happens, I feel I've really done it right.
1 comment:
The word should be "stifling". I am not stifled but I am breathless. There are so many lines here that I want to capture and turn into something of my own. The undercurrent of this poem really puts one in that time, in that place, in that condition. this poem has a resonation that is extrodinary.
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