This week's (completely and totally optional) idea over at Poetry Thursday was "Anyone up for singing along?" What follows here is a 500-word kind-of poem (I'm a fiction writer, not a poet, remember). You won't really know what song I've incorporated until halfway through or so, and (as yet to be determined) prizes go to the readers who manage to make it through the whole thing.
ten minutes till poetry
thursday and i’m trying
to get at some divine moment
that elucidates perfectly human
consciousness—in all its subtleties
and profound intricacies, its longings,
large and small. i’m thinking
of something metaphorical about
the 4-H tent during the county fair,
how judging for the flower competition
has just commenced on the hottest day
of the year. i’m thinking of some girl
with a watering can standing over a vase
full of wildflowers she’s arranged. the girl,
sweaty and worried, knows the judges
will deduct points for wet petals
but she doesn’t want them to droop
either, doesn’t want the whole arrangement
ruined because of this ridiculous heat,
and i’m wondering what she’ll do,
like i said, trying to figure out
the intricacies and subtleties of her
twelve-year-old mind
and heart and put those things
into some sort of action, but i can’t
get styx’s “lady” out of my head.
so there’s the girl with the watering can
and dennis deyoung’s vocals singing
“when i’m with you i’m smiling”
competing for space in my brain
and the singing’s winning out. i
could think about moonlight skates
at the roller rink, holding lynn
jenks’ sweaty hand in mine
as we complete lap after lap,
not wanting the song ever to end,
but instead i’m out of the 4-h barn,
away from the roller rink,
and sitting in a hot car outside the bank
while mom runs inside to cash this week’s
check. it’s 1984, and i’m eight, three
years younger than the song playing
in the cassette player. the car’s
ignition is on, but there’s no air coming out
of the vents because the car’s not
moving or the air condition is broken—
i can’t remember which—and i’m wishing
mom didn’t like styx so much,
that she hadn’t named me dennis
after the lead singer, and that she didn’t
sometimes get drunk and tell me
dennis deyoung was my true father,
not the guy who came to pick me up
every other weekend and who asked me
how mom was doing with this look
on his face like he was still in love
with her, despite it all.
and i’m wishing, too, sitting
in the car, too young for deodorant,
that i wasn’t sweating so much
and that we could just go through
the drive-up window like everybody
else because then the air
conditioner, if it wasn’t broken,
would be running full-steam,
prickling my chest with cool.
but mom, she was always afraid
of those canisters that sank out of the sky
through tubes. she thought that,
like photographs or poetry, or a perfectly
arranged vase of flowers, or a song,
the canisters could snatch
your soul, steal it away,
and never let you have it back.
8.03.2006
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13 comments:
Well, I made it through twice, and love the scene you've set so well. I've no idea what the song is even after all of that, but I've known life as a wilted petal, so each to his own, I say.
I didn't try to guess the song. I only wanted to capture the moment of your poem. Wow.
I love this poem. I have no idea what the song is but I love this poem. And I used my Scope today, just for you.
You are all too kind and deserve serious gifts. I'll get to thinking on them.
As for the song: You don't know Styx's "Lady"? It's a power ballad circa 1973 that hit the top ten in 1975. If you heard it, I'm guessing you'd know it--all of you. Go to iTunes and listen to the sample. Or, um, don't.
Great Job! Styx, of course, how could we not have recognized it. And to think, I have the greatest hits albums.
For some reason I was thinking of "Lady" by Kenny Rogers but now I remember what song you're talking about. And I read your little comment on Lynn's blog and have responded in kind.
Next up: a poem that incorporates "Lady" by Kenny Rogers.
Or "The Gambler"
Know when to walk away,
Know when to...
*Sigh* This is why I love you.
i had so much to say after i read this poem...
but then i read the comments...
and got stuck on kenny rogers...i love him (well, let's just say he was a big part of my child hood; even wrote a post all about him earlier this year...though if i wrote a poem about him it might include how i wish he would have never gotten all the plastic surgery and just owned that he is the gambler).
but i do want to say, the scenes you have created here, how you move through them...it is like i got to tiptoe through your mind for a moment. fantastic.
Thanks so much, liz.
Wasn't Kenny Rogers a large part of everyone's childhood?
And I'm with you on the plastic surgery thing; he does look quite freakish lately.
Thanks for stopping by my blog. I enjoyed this poem and think it's quite elegant.
This is wonderful, love the stream of consciousness flow to it, the way you're present all the way through, it kept me glued.
I love the nostalgic feel of this piece, and I know the song well, although I think Renegade was their best tune ever (even if Tommy Shaw thought he was on the "lamb," and I wonder what he was really thinking when he wrote it, and they went down hill ninety miles an hour with Mr. Roboto).
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