Sunday, September 4, 2016

Rob Schackne #66 - A Hundred Feet

A Hundred Feet


Nothing there that wasn’t before
a horse head in a drum of fire
smoke floating on bone and fat


A hundred feet above the grotto
a hundred chances to get higher
I walk to the summit to be thrilled

(It wants me killed a hundred times)

I spy a piece of honeyed glass
I take it and dive into the green

Below love clear deep water
those old white walls so shining
a hundred people sit in the theatron

The chorus wears a mask
and they all look up to the surface
waiting to be thrilled

Beauty says it isn’t love
the sun sets in another sky
love says splash doesn’t matter

4 comments:

  1. each stanza beautifully poetic inasmuch as the movement between the stanzas is a teasing play between desire and its realisation

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, dear Efi. (Although I'm not sure that's a compliment!) But please teach me the correct Greek pronunciation of 'theatron'?

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  2. I like this lucid mystery - a play perhaps

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  3. Thank you, Jeffree. Lots of ways to read this thing of course, it's pretty dreamy. Put simply, I first imagined a diver off the cliffs entering the water where he finds an ancient submerged Greek theatre. Where the ancient audience in the 'theatron' is waiting for him. I know the first stanza can jeopardise the entire thing - and "Nothing real that wasn't before", what the hell does that mean? - but I wanted a strong image of earth and fire, before the water, and finally the sky.

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