Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Rob Schackne #27 - Poems For Airports

Poems For Airports


1.

Black thrumming runway
its deep core solid and cold

there's a beach somewhere
they will not stay there long

the minutes will look fixed
it could be a strange mess

the sea retakes the shells

all tomorrow's parties
must begin today.


2.

Finally at the baggage claim
the humming rock the cradle

cranked away from sight
in sortation through a system

your electric razor's tossed
because it's a useless current

your favourite sweater now
worn by a sweating freak

an undecided cretin tries
to decipher your precious book

the start of the big machine
bumps against a rubber belt

at our carousel of wanting
a bawling toddler's pointing

at a chicken foot going round
it's a fog you can barely see.


3.

From the sky to the stun of day
off the plane down the ramp

she left last week's paper there
and a bad novel dogged at page 5

the sun is blinding (where is this?)

she sees the goons at 4 o'clock
control her usual breeze of air

waiting for the big bag to come off
Customs Customs moment coming

she's now forgotten al-Qur'an
3 children and an evil mother-in-law

she suspects her faith is wanting.


4.

A loving treatment of time
where did it go post-nostalgia

present serendip cool across
the tarmac and swept away

instead I'm running out of time
sitting in this dark room alone

no more gifts please let me sleep
stop asking if I'm already there

my note to self in a book of hours
buy a nice jewel and a box tomorrow

this morning in the airport pursuant
to baggage claim you claimed nothing.


_____________


Note: Writing these poems, I was of course listening to Eno's classic. I owe much to that. But while I once thought they were about airports, air friction, the ground, the weariness of the destination and the weariness of the way back -- now I don't think they are about airports at all, but about us all getting safely to the places we're going. God bless. Godspeed. We are bees. 

2 comments:

  1. Good one. Made me laugh and cringe in recognition, simultaneously. I'm a big fan of Eno's music for airports - I listened to it everyday on the road overseas for 5 weeks straight (at the time of the twin towers attack). So I know your reading of it is correct - at the time, I didn't think of it as a safety recording (mind the gap), but I shall now :) lol Thanks, Rob.

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