VANISHING POINT
I’m sitting on my sister’s balcony.
She’s watering a row of flowers.
For years I've brought Mum here
to stay with Sophie at weekends,
but drove today alone.
Osmosis is the word for it.
The roots begin to fidget in the throat.
You feel the tension in the stalk and stems
as water floods the irises
and vision blurs.
I am reminded of the early years
when Mum would go out to the shops
and leave us for an hour.
If she was late, I’d fix my stare
on where the two sides of the lane converged,
while Sophie did her best
to reassure me she would soon appear.
HAPTICS
Before I left,
Mum asked me to shave Dad,
which I had never done before;
And as I turned and tilted his large head,
I read his cranial morphology,
acquiring a much more precise
relief map of his lineaments,
transmitted through the blade’s caress,
than through my eyes
in all my filial years.
Bold sculpture there.
And when I’d bathed and dried his face,
whose haptic image I’ll always retain,
I kissed him
and left to catch my plane,
assuming I would soon see him again.
Paul Demuth - I like the sound of my name ‘Paul’ because it chimes nicely with whoever I am.
What a beautiful capture of such tender moments ❤️
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DeleteGentle words, loving words, beautiful words.
ReplyDeleteThis man loves words, exploring strong and tender trying to work things out.
ReplyDeleteFrom the spirit of a mother to the realistic task of shaving a father, a lifetime is depicted of a son. I feel my elderly parent's in yours.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely gorgeous poetry my friend...
ReplyDelete❤️🙏
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