Friday, June 17, 2016

Robert Verdon, #177, Day-glo Days



perhaps it’s a glowing daydream

rain like a thousand distant typewriters,
Remington manuals in some fifties office,
echoing along idle ducts through my bored imagination
behind hollow eyes and eight grassed knolls
spanned by forking freeways of space-age American cars —
1951, maybe, and we are young, white, and working,

if you call it that, scribbling and tuning in
to the whimpering of Korean latitude and longitude
in the new curved atlas on the big imperial desk
by the normally wholesome sunny window
that opens onto a little bee-haunted garden for show,
not really for unskilled white-collar members

of the sinuous upper working-class, something
we never call ourselves, because
we of the red scare years in crewcuts or pony-tails,
we of the red stilettoes or creased brothel-creepers,
we of the Dad’s in a union but he isn’t a commie generation, are too busy
fantasising about the latest slinky encounter at the soda fountain, or atomic annihilation,

and it’s all suburban fantasy anyway,
as I was not even born at the time, never admired such complacency,
remember of that decade only the wet, narrow streets
of slate-grey Dunvant in Wales, with the gold moon over Pen-y-Bryn
— and have never been to America.

3 comments:

  1. Thank you. I enjoyed this very much.

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  2. what a great entry into the poem - 'rain like a thousand distant typewriters' - and then to go somewhere so unexpected. Great poem, Robbie.

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