Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Jan 2019
TWO ETERNITIES AND AN INFINITY

The doc gave me
the once over.

"Well...what is it
doc...tell me!"

"Now...don't quote me but
to quote Mr. Eliot

you got
"Some minor problems of the soul."

"What'ya mean minor
for crying out loud.!"

I know this is
a personal question but

how long exactly have you been
eh...dead?"

"They tell me only an hour or so
...no more I...still not use to it!"

"Well you see as far as I can see
you are leaking time

and only your will to live is
keeping you...keeping on."

I was thinking of asking
for a second opinion.

"You are finding it hard to believe
...you are dead

despite all the obvious signs
and the facts."

He paused
scribbled indecipherably on a pad.

"But it's not the physical
aspect I am worried about."

He paused again.
I drank in the silence.

"It's the state of your soul
good God man

you can't go to your maker
in such a state."

I opened my mouth
but the doc told me to close it.

"No...you can't
ask not to be born!"

He placed his fingertips
together in a typical doctor gesture.

"But we can now give you
a replacement soul

that once belonged
to a second to none nun.

Life's cheap I thought but
a soul ain't.

"What in Heaven's name
will it cost!"

"The usual..." he chuckled gleefully
"Two eternities and an infinity."
The dangers of being both sick...and tired...and being sick and tired of being sick and tired and falling asleep reading Old Possum.

Here be the Goldfish and nothing but the Goldish so help me Eliot.

Goldfish
by T. S. Eliot

(Essence of Summer Magazines)

I

Always the August evenings come

With preparation for the waltz

The hot verandah making room

For all the reminiscent tunes

— The Merry Widow and the rest —

That call, recall

So many nights and afternoons —

August, with all its faults!

And the waltzes turn, return;

The Chocolate Soldier assaults

The tired Sphinx of the physical.

What answer? We cannot discern.

And the waltzes turn, return,

Float and fall,

Like the cigarettes

Of our marionettes

Inconsequent, intolerable.

II

Embarquement pour Cythere

Ladies, the moon is on its way!

Is everybody here?

And the sandwiches and ginger beer?

If so, let us embark —

The night is anything but dark,

Almost as clear as day.

It's utterly illogical

Our making such a start, indeed

And thinking that we must return.

Oh no! why should we not proceed

(As long as a cigarette will burn

When you light it at the evening star)

To porcelain land, what avatar

Where blue-delft-romance is the law

Philosophy through a paper straw!

III

On every sultry afternoon

Verandah customs have the call

White flannel ceremonial

With cakes and tea

And guesses at eternal truths

Sounding the depths with a silver spoon

And dusty roses, crickets, sunlight on the sea

And all.

And should you ever hesitate

Among such charming scenes —

Essence of summer magazines —

Hesitate, and estimate

How much is simple accident

How much one knows

How much one means

Well! among many apophthegms

Here's one that goes —

Play to your conscience, through the maze

Of means and ways

And wear the crown of your ideal

Bays

And rose.

IV

Among the debris of the year

Of which the autumn takes its toll: —

Old letters, programmes, unpaid bills

Photographs, tennis shoes, and more,

Ties, postal cards, the mass that fills

The limbo of a bureau drawer —

Of which October takes its toll

Among the debris of the year.

I find this headed " Barcarolle " .

" Along the wet paths of the sea

A crowd of barking waves pursue

Bearing what consequence to you

And me.

The neuropathic winds renew

Like marionettes who leave their graves

Walking the waves

Bringing the news from either Pole

Or knowledge of the fourth dimension:

" We beg to call to your attention

" Some minor problems of the soul. "

— Your seamanship is very neat

You scan the clouds, as if you knew,

Your language nautical, complete;

There's nothing left for me to do.

And while you give the wheel a twist

I gladly leave the rest to fate

And contemplate

The aged sybil in your eyes

At the four crossroads of the world

Whose oracle replies: —

" These problems seem importunate

But after all do not exist. "

Between the theoretic seas

And your assuring certainties

I have my fears:

— I am off for some Hesperides

Of street pianos and small beers!
Donall Dempsey
Written by
Donall Dempsey  Guildford
(Guildford)   
298
 
Please log in to view and add comments on poems