Going Back to the Red House (Grunge) by Dale Williams Barrigar

The garden has grown

over and become

a sanctuary-of-sorts for all kinds

of stray cats, birds, possums, and other

explosions of indigenous life and

the porch is broken

the shutters just fall

and no more time is to be had

for trifles like these, at all

but there’s a recyclable paper bag

containing donuts once

snagged in a weed tree.

And upon it

Someone” you will

never forget

has written in

(before trailing off

and going away)

magic marker

calligraphy:

“Dear Sir,

you kissed my feet the last time

I saw you and it made

your hair

fall

around my walking

for a very long time.

But I am OK

this way

out and about again

on my own

yet I thought I

just wanted you

to know

and oh

my hand is steadier now –

and

I used to want you,

I really did, you know”

Dale Barrigar Williams

7 thoughts on “Going Back to the Red House (Grunge) by Dale Williams Barrigar

    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      Hi Diane

      Thanks for your reader-reactions to this. Lovely and with beautiful feeling is exactly what I was going for here and it’s wonderful to know you felt like this poem has these qualities.

      Dale

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  1. Dale

    No less a skeptic that Arthur C Clarke once said that maybe there are conditions in which images from the past can briefly recur in the future; hence an explanation for ghost sightings. The trash bag in this made me think of that. It is not a direct logical connection, but one regardless. Lilting and haunting.

    Leila

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    • DWB's avatar DWB says:

      L.A.

      Your comment/ary is brilliant because it points out the connection between poetry and connections and how poetry is all about connections, but less so of the so-called logical kind: and more so of the so-called imaginative variety.

      This poem is about living on in the aftermath of various emotional catastrophes (and mental breakdowns) and how nothing remains the same: or disappears.

      D.B.

      (((PS

      This poem also has a familial connection to “The Lady of Shalott” by Tennyson…while I can’t claim to touch Tennyson’s greatness, I do claim to feel an uncanny emotional kinship with him…that feels ghostly.)))

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  2. chrisja70778e85b8abd's avatar chrisja70778e85b8abd says:

    DWB

    Great images! Amazing how you can create such a vision with just a few words. I like how the garden has become a refuge for animals. It goes against the insanity of beautification, which means grass cut to the nub in a treeless yard.

    “and no more time is to be had

    for trifles like these, at all” I like how this sounds and what it implies.

    Excellent writing!

    CJA

    Liked by 1 person

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