
51
… and thus I sit in silence
while unspoken words
echo through
my empty skull
I cannot produce
the grit that oysters use
to smoothly shape
the pearl of great price
that radiates with light
the word
once spoken
can never be recalled
word magic
water magic
liquid trickling
from cup to earthen cup
time slowly dripping away
filtering through my fingers
flickering and dying,
and the snuffed candle flame
absent now
and everywhere
the pain of its absence …
52
… and me like so many others
caught up in time’s dance
a shadow among other shadows
moving on the cave wall
while the fire flickers
I try to hold them
as they flit by
but they vanish
drifting like dreams
half-glimpsed
in early morning light
dancers and dance
must fail and fade away
when the music ends
I recall snippets of song
that fan the unborn fires within
what am I
but a tadpole
swimming bravely
into my next metamorphosis
the dancers hold hands
and sing, oranges and lemons
as they circle under the arch
“Here comes a candle
to light you to bed
and here comes a chopper
to chop off your head
and when will that be
ring the bells out at Battersea
I do not know
booms the great Bell of Bow” …
Commentary:
And here ends Clepsydra. One sentence, one poem, 52 sequences. Time, frozen in the writer’s mind, the passing of time, measuring time, internal time, external time, sidereal time, historical time … all linked through memories … personal, cultural, literary, family, events … all tied up with what Miguel de Unamuno called intra-historia, those deep, very personal little histories, that lead us away from great historical events into the minds of the observers, the witnesses, the readers, all with their interior monologue and their own mindfulness.
For those of you who have chosen to walk this road with me, I offer you my gratitude. I do hope you have enjoyed – if not the whole journey, then selected parts of it that may have touched you, or amused you, or aroused your interest. Pax amorque.







