Dead Arm Poem by Matthew Coombe

Dead Arm

Rating: 5.0


The uninvited guests and intruders
that call in the night and rudely pluck us
from the body of sleep are legion.

The neighbours making-up inside,
their cats making war outside,
are but a few of the guest stars and plot lines
in the nocturnal soap opera
which we, the audience, are obliged to endure.

But to be woken in the night
besides a disembodied arm,
some dismembered upper limb
is an alarm call which never fails to amuse.

A corpse remains, but its essence, its armness,
its ethereal mojo, has made off into the night.
Without leaving so much as note
to say where it has gone
or what time to expect it back.

It is deaf to my commands to rise
and shed its shroud of death,
and as I lift it from its steel slab,
and feel its limp cold flesh
I begin to speculate.

What was it that came in the night
and disconnected the cables and wires
from the sockets of the senses?

Or maybe, taking female form,
it slipped silently from the bed
and is standing outside under the streetlamp,
its orange half-glow sweetly illuminating the fit of her jeans.
The dizzying altitude of her high-heeled boots.

Like a bird of prey, its return will be slow and silent.
But as assured as the healing onset of spring,
after winter’s bite.

It begins with a gentle scratching at the door.
Then the teeth of a key, lifting the pins
in the hasp of a lock.

Then just as a final piece of a jigsaw
drops satisfyingly into place to complete the picture,
the spectrum of colour and sensation is restored.
He hangs up his coat under the stairs
and casts his shoes into a corner.

(www.mcsspace-mc31.blogspot.com)

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Muriel Emerson 01 February 2008

i love this poem it has great insight

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Stefania Paluzzi 21 January 2008

well, this poem is incredibly alive a monologue which the author envoys to the readers attracting their ears and curiosity since the very opening lines -creating a sort of mutual knowledge; he envoys and controls speculating about something you can't control: fantasies about one's own dark and unconscious rebellion, parts of us which refuse to work a sense out of the reasonable routines or any feelings to make us at easy and rest so, there's always a side in our normality that wanders for dreaming deeds and when it comes back it will ache again, as a point unresolved yet great poem, according to me

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