Monday, May 24, 2010

Record player

I am a turntable,

needle in the groove.

The records of my history

crackle into the air,

motes of dust dancing down memory.


Black vinyl spins me into being –

a hopeless song sung to win a father,

an angry riff ending nowhere.

Tender chords tremble through a remembered house,

ache of forgiveness that came too late.


I am a pile of album covers,

obsolete, stacked in a corner somewhere.

The imprint of a woman gathering poppies on a cardboard sheath,

Schubert’s lament, my mother’s crimson fears.


I set a ring in whirling motion

track a tune to bring back a time

when his love would have made a difference.

The girl merges with the music.

1 comment:

Rebecca said...

I was looking for some new poetry to read and came across yours. I really like this and the imagery of the vinyl/record player.

I loved this:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Black vinyl spins me into being.

I am a hopeless song sung to win a father,

an angry riff ending nowhere.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I've often felt this, too, but "father" having a different meaning. I can relate to your words and love how you put it all together.

Peace.

~Rebecca