Posts Tagged ‘monkey’

Monkey 3

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The monkey that bursts from my torso
burns toast and blisters thumbs.
It swings on bone asymmetric bars,
palms strapped in waxed cotton.

A doll-sized heel kicks in a balloon
bomb of raspberry leaves
while the monkey slides from rib to spine,
fast and strong as a drum,

slips from my grip, rattles
on my ribcage, forces an escape
to an English hillside
grey with rocks and a tupperware sky.

An old soul licks its lips,
swallows salt water, savours the taste
of roasted buffalo
flesh between teeth, wet with juice and blood.

Gulls tannoy traffic, wail
for sea when I wake in the morning,
listening for a heartbeat
under the screech of green lorakeets.

Monkey 2 – syllabics

Friday, July 17th, 2009

monkeydraft3

The monkey that bursts from my torso
burns toast and blisters thumbs.
It swings on bone asymmetric bars,
palms strapped in waxed cotton.

A doll-sized heel kicks in a balloon
bomb of raspberry leaves
while the monkey slips from rib to spine,
fast and strong as a drum.

An old soul licks its lips,
swallows salt water, savours the taste
of roasted buffalo
flesh between teeth, wet with juice and blood.

Need to add another stanza from the earlier draft where I wake from the dream but I’m not really in the dream but I’d like to capture the feeling afterwards – FEAR – of something bigger and stronger than you at work over which you have little control.

Monkey +

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

I had another dream about the baby. This time I’m freewriting straight into the post. The baby was blond haired and very like S. Nothing like me. It was a girl but like a boy or was it a boy like a girl? In any case the monkey has stuck with me. The elasticity. The strength and physicality. Someone asked me if I’d had strange dreams which was a symptom of pregnancy – and I said ‘no’ – then the very next night I had one, and then another consecutively. (Pregnancy has ‘symptoms’: interesting – is it partially in our consciousness as some kind of dis-ease?) Anyway: I need to keep that brute physicality in mind. It was frightening – or fascinating. The blond baby was also intriguing. I want green eyes so I want the baby to have green eyes. But you need green to get green apparently. Brown and blue won’t do it. S and the baby were alike. I felt a bit left out. The baby was older. Could sit up. It was however human! So I’m thankful for small mercies. It’s late now. Over and out.

Karen McCarthy Woolf

karenreddressfull Karen McCarthy Woolf was born in London to an English mother and Jamaican father. Her poetry pamphlet The Worshipful Company of Pomegranate Slicers was selected as a New Statesman Book of the Year. She is also an editor. Check her website for more.

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