Tuesday Poem: Hit and Run, by Michael Jackson

 



That absolute

and unfeigned stillness

I can't get used to

even when it's only the family cat

that's dead

hit on the road

carried to the bathroom

on a green towel

lying there now

with a set grimace

a smear of blood

a broken leg

freeze-framed against the curtains

moving in the wind, my own reflection

moving in the mirror,

gone – or what we knew of her –

and that evaporation

of what we know as life

impossible to comprehend

so instantaneous

and irreversible

as in the beginning

a child is suddenly

there

as if from nowhere

and no way back

alive where there was nothing

such passages, so abrupt,

there is no cancelling

as there is with words,

no taking back

a remark that hurt

no revising the manuscript;

these events cannot be

revisited

there is no as if

or only if

it has happened

nothing more

and so you leave

a space on the page, a gap

as the only way of alluding

to this emptiness,

the day that began with

a cat going through a door

and ended with clay

spaded into a hole in the yard

and me trudging back to the shed

kicking earth from the sole

of my shoes

and washing my hands

as if that was the end of it.



Credit note: From Michael Jackson's new poetry collection Being of Two Minds (Wellington: Steele Roberts, 2012) - please follow that link for sales information.



Tim says: On Thursday, I will be posting my interview with the distinguished New Zealand anthropologist and poet Michael Jackson.



That interview focuses on Road Markings, his memoir of a recent return visit to New Zealand, published by Rosa Mira Books. But since Michael Jackson is also a well-published poet, I asked if I could feature one of the poems from his latest collection as my Tuesday Poem this week - and Michael sent this fine poem in answer to that request.



One of the many good things about Road Markings is that, though mostly prose, it also contains a number of Michael's poems, included where they fit the narrative. Stand by for lots more about Road Markings on Thursday!



You can check out all the Tuesday Poems on the Tuesday Poem blog - the hub poem in the middle of the page, and all the other poems in the sidebar on the right.You can buy books by Tim Jones online! Voyagers: SF Poetry from NZ from Amazon.Transported (short story collection) from Fishpond or New Zealand Books Abroad.

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Published on April 02, 2012 04:28
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