Arts for the 21st Century

FATHER

A Poem from the Archives:

Vol. 15, No. 60, Pages 259–261 (June 1976)

Father I remember your sweat seasoning

the dry earth

 

fertilising the iron decks

you scraped with devotion

in the dead-

ly sun

 

swelling the seas

you have travelled.

 

Pacing water

chipping rust;

 

a boatswain to small island

sailors

without pride or purpose.

 

Now you hobble through simple tasks

that crack

your heart.

 

I can still smell your sweat in the air

from your weekend's returning

armed with stories, jokes and complaints

about the men.

 

I can smell your distant letters buried

in the shit of mice, roaches

 

and

the stench of your decaying suitcase anchored

below the bed.

 

Today

I confess my love

for you

 

though we seldom exchange

more than nods

 

a quiet smile over the cricket score

 

but we know

and

acknowledge each other's burden

 

sharing the occasional outburst of

anger

as communion.

 

Remember

there was a day you

quarrelled with mother

and pulled at the clothes lines

and uprooted them

from the waists of trees

weeping a rage that spelt murder.

 

2

 

Father

talk to my woman

for I can still untie that

knot

 

I too can uproot lines.

 

She must

thread my isolation

carefully

 

for already she has broken too many promises.

 

3

 

Look woman

the knots in my hair are real

 

my touch could stab as

sure as my tongue

don't try to tell me

who I am

for

there are rages beneath my

skull

that only amnesia can

cool

 

so don't fool with powers you

think

you know.

 

See father, a man whose

feet are swollen like

his pride;

 

control over self almost gone;

 

that beautiful wreck is what

commitment can bring one to

 

love of home before self

 

so don't tell me about

faith

 

one must draw the line somewhere

or else

grow old

and blind for causes that are not

one's own.

 

Respect that sailor's shipwreck

that child marooned off

his own waters

is me grown old and almost

harmless

 

don't drown him in your tears

 

honour him

by your silence

and silent devotion to a future

we all share.