A Boy in Nassau
To be happy
Is to be simple
Running
From the porch
To the front wall
To the mango tree
Down to Mr. Edwards
At the Adastra Gardens
And over the hill
To the sea
Where the big fort
Keeps watch
For fragments from the past
For all eternity
Bubbles
Nothing great
Is ever
accomplished alone
No bubble
lasts forever
And the truth
Can hardly
compete
With our
fictions
But when it
all
Cracks on the
rocks
And sinks
To the bottom
Of another
dark sea
Rats and the
wise
Never look
back
Because the big
things
In life
Matter of
course
But never as
much
As the small
things
In front of
Our eyes
Dream Time
Penetrating
The heart of darkness
And forging
In the fires of desire
I have seen
The other side
Of all dimensions
And connected
The fullness of time
To myself
Touching ultra-terrestrial
Entities of vision
In parallel space
While peeling back
The curtains of place
Entering doorways through
The centre of things
Travelling back
To now
Gleam
Cynical
Illuminations
Beneath the master’s
Corner stone
Mundane musings
Reborn
And new secrets
Locked
In darkened rooms
Moving deeper
Into chaos
Without external force
Level by level
Through old mysteries
Clever
As the owl flies
Le Bateau est Encore
Ivre
The Café de la Mairie
Speaks loudest
In the mornings
With my thoughts disordered
By regret and fear
And history’s long heartache
Melting into my temples
Like liquid fire
The faint hum of madness
Swelling in the corners
My boat
Still drunk
From the night before
John Drudge is a social
worker working in the field of disability management and holds degrees in
social work, rehabilitation services, and psychology. He is the author of
three books of poetry: “March” and “The Seasons of Us” (both published in 2019)
and New Days (published in 2020). His work has appeared widely in numerous
literary journals, magazines, and anthologies internationally. John is also a
Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominee and lives in Caledon Ontario, Canada
with his wife and two children.
Wonderful poetry thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteFive fabulous poems indeed. Thank you, John
ReplyDelete