Confession Poem by Reginald Gibbons

Confession

Rating: 3.5


Down in the blue-green water
at nightfall some selving shapes
float fluorescing, trance-dancing,
trembling to the rhythm of
theodoxical marching-
music that they hear over
the mere noise of the breaking
tide. Above, stars in certain
places; along the shore roads,
cars carrying people on
uncertain errands, sordid
and sacred and all the kinds
in between. Halogen-lit,
a woman gets down from her
all-wheel-drive velocipede,
enters through an obeying
door a cyclopean store
to buy unintelligent
fresh fish and other objects
whether formerly alive
or formerly dead, she comes
out again, a poor man calls
to her, selling his no-news-
paper; the disastrous head-
lines smile and nod, they announce
the plans of steel patriots
and undertakers, ad-men
and fallen vice-generals,
doping their stolen crusades.
But the woman has learned, as
I have learned, as all of us
must keep learning if we are
to be good subjects, how to
make of a newspaper the
mask of a locust, calmly
put it on, and begin once
more to eat everything up.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Michael Morgan 16 August 2016

A fabulous,10 and very, very modern (in the best sense) poem. MM

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