
Daydreams
The alarm clock shuffles
its pack of sleeping hours:
a clicking of claws,
needles knitting outwards
towards dawn’s guillotine.
A knife edge
this keening wind
sharpening my bones
tingling fingers and toes.
Ageing eyes refurbished
in the morning’s sky fire.
Ravishing rainbows
dazzling the eyelash of day.
Old myths grow legs.
They wander away
to gather in quiet corners,
where the wind weaves
dry leaves into endless
figures of eight.
An old man now,
I dream of white rabbits,
running down tunnels,
escaping the hunter’s hands.
When my dreams break up,
they back into a cul-de-sac:
a wilderness of harsh black scars.
Scalpels, my finger nails, carving
red slashes on white-washed walls,
trenchant shadows, twisted dancers,
old warrior kings
bent into pipe wire shapes.
Great poem. So, duermeviela, there is a name for it, huh? I often wonder if I’ve been dreaming or if it really happened, actually calling people at times to ask if we had really done that. Now if I get stuck in a rubber room some place, I can give them the name of my condition. Thanks, my friend. I have a name to prove my sanity! Should that make me feel better? or worse? or just confused, my usual state of life!!
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