Taut
as a flagstaff, day erects itself
despite
wanton sprinklers, the brazen dahlias
planted for a Cup.
Just to marvel at the barricades
of morning
is a kind of start before the caffeinated
rush.
This is how day begins and must,
not with the spurious menace
of wind and seas
but a solitary purposeful figure
crossing a park way too early,
not unhandsome, but a freakish suit.
Repeatedly he glances over his shoulder,
framing mornings vista as
if thats a rifle
oddly awkward in his pack. Rifle
or tripod.
Then overtures of shadow colonise
the park,
reclaim it, not even eerie yet,
unperturbed by day and its temerities.
Round the park by their windows
executives knot their ties like
silky halters,
Windsored for days slow sequacious
ceremonies:
accommodations of the boardroom,
little defeats by the photocopier.
Soon Ill drive through alimentary
traffic
and address those dawning boys at
my old school.
But what to say after the flaccid
hymn
and the gowned homily? No idea.
Breakfast is wholesome, not oratory.
Perhaps I should discourse on the
romance of morning,
its bleary glory, the dahlias and
detritus,
what that loping youth, glancing
over his shoulder,
stooping now to light a cigarette,
discerns behind him and ahead: Lord
Jims
crazy lesson (marked Epiphany in
red).
Ill read it to the boys from
my old Penguin edition:
4/-, cracked spine, a boyish script
no longer recognisable,
Peter OToole indestructible
on the front.