There are still such things as dreams

There are still such things as dreams

A Poem by Beccy

There became an overstepping of the mark,
a thinning of the gulf between us and the brutes.
It lies in the past, but disfigures the future;
and though heaven is broad and blue
it cannot explain all that has passed,
why the shepherd turned his flock about.

And thus, we search, mostly among
suburban chimneys, below the clouds;
trapped in an insomniac hinterland,
where so much remains unexplained
and frankincence and myrrh
have all but faded from memory.

Of late, (so it seems,) science has rescued us.
Though only as panacea; a cure-all
of sorts; lauded as the only means
of escape at our disposal; that whatever
falls apart is predictable, and therefore
both explainable and curable.

Gone is Voltaire's 'mad daughter,'
replaced by method and order. Those
'little grey cells,' so beloved of Poirot,
designer outcomes the new raison d'être;
though lichen covered Aspens still decay
serenely, as priests preach decorum.

Here and there, pockets of resistance survive.
A last hippie, an Amish horse drawn cart,
those who have yet to visit Ikea and
re-assemble the brutalised jigsaw of a tree.
But the wilderness has been suborned
to the turning of knobs, the pressing of buttons.

Soon, of necessity, it will be time again
for the self sharpening ploughshare,
the gnarled, weather beaten hand,
as paleness, along with the unholy
precision of technology, passes;
and in passing, turns such wizardry
to so much chaff blown on the wind;

It will be likened to a rise of sea,
a fall of earth, a cleansing and sloughing;
allowing the outnumbered dead to rise,
sip wine and converse in civilised tones,
as all over the world, machines stop
and men, who once scourged, make peace. 

This will give us a  chance to dream again,
appreciate the beauty of ripening grain,
the silver leaping of fish, full gilled,
unpoisoned, absolving all blame;
as spring to summer sweetly births
and eyes once closed take fresh delight
in sun and sky and a new dawn's light.

Then again...

© 2022 Beccy


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Reviews

Sadly, Beccy, technology, "instant" solutions and politically motivated guesswork has resulted in most of the problems that you have subtly and satirically revealed in your poem. Whilst not decrying the value of much of the progress, there is always the danger of "testing to destruction" undoing the advances .
But as your last line states...... Then again!!
Excellent poem giving much rise to thought.

Norman


Posted 3 Years Ago


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As we fill the brim and cross the limit of wrongdoings, some calamities might renew the world. For a new bunch of lives to explore from the ashes.
After four years my whole family reunited in a house due to lockdown and we get to see each other's faces more othen just as we had wanted. What more shall our God provide even at our ungrateful-ness.
Loveliest words and thought assembled here dear Beccy. Like we wash our face with splashes of water and feel fresh, our world too needs a cleanup. Am grateful that it's not wearing off its most harmful product rigt now, humans.
I might dream this dawn, again☆

Posted 3 Years Ago


I can't decide whether to sing or cry, re-read your poem or write one myself. This is so inspirational on so many levels. I often think about how we, as humans, overestimate our power to engineer solutions to anything that comes as a splash-back to our insistence upon dominating the planet & everything on it. What? I little pandemic? We'll devise coping mechanisms & quasi-solutions! But it seems the plagues keep getting thicker & I actually dream of the day when humans finally destroy ourselves with our greed & self-absorption, such that this planet can heal itself of our abuse like the creatures coming alive again with distorted coping mechanisms after their habitat was decimated by some nuclear accident, say, but these creatures are fundamentally changed & that makes me pretty convinced that even if humans were stopped in their tracks & this mighty planet regenerated itself, there would still be those unavoidable scars on the creatures & on the land. This is such an incredible message, I'm not doing it justice a bit, but pardon me for blathering on! I wish I could address current ills in such a deep & sweeping way, but not have it sound like a tirade. (((HUGS))) Fondly, Margie

Posted 3 Years Ago


Your clever use of our language is superb, and the originality of your thoughts, quite stunning here Beccy.

This is poetry at its best, invoking a depth of perception that few possess. Love that line,
'Gone is Voltaire's 'mad daughter,' and stanza five in particular is just so very imaginative, particularly your portrayal of Ikea and the brutalized jigsaw of a tree, loved that!

Will end by saying that like every sane and caring human on this planet, I will pray for your last verse to become a reality.

Posted 3 Years Ago


It will be likened to a rise of sea,
a fall of earth, a cleansing and sloughing;
allowing the outnumbered dead to rise,
sip wine and converse in civilised tones,
as all over the world, machines stop
and men, who once scourged, make peace.


If only, Becky, if only. Methinks we know Man is too far along the road of self preservation rather than the saving of Man and his instinctive standing at the water hole, sharing the last teeny tear of water.

Your words, your thoughts, your You are unbeatable. And beautiful.

Posted 3 Years Ago


This poem is a lovely dream.
A gift from the gifted.

Posted 3 Years Ago



Hey Becky.. there is absolutely no point in me trying to be clever and finding words that come anywhere near the true mark.. to describe just how bloomin good these words of yours really are.. Each one of my eight reviewing predecessors appear to have pretty much used up most of the words I would have liked to have gifted you and this amazing post...

Neville

Posted 3 Years Ago


'How has poetry changed you", was an article from a 2009 version of "American Poetry Review"'? It gathered all the modern poets together to comment on the impact of imagination; of how, even the slightest way, that impact has changed the course of their lives...You answered it in the final stanza my friend...if we could just go back, "find delight again in sun and sky". I mean when we contemplate "Moby Dick" we are never the old white guy standing up in some rickety boat yelling. Poetry means that you are the pearl in the stomach of the whale with finicky taste, doing that nickel dance against his worn down teeth. You're a wonderful writer.....dana

Posted 3 Years Ago


Beccy

3 Years Ago

Thank you dana, you are much appreciated. I would love to read that article. I have tapped it into g.. read more
h d e rushin

3 Years Ago

I misspoke Beccy. The article "How Poetry Helps People Live Their Lives" appeared in the July-August.. read more
Beccy

3 Years Ago

Thank you dana. Heads up much appreciated.

X
This makes me think of that period of peace predicted by the Bible. There is a sense here of moving back and forth between simplicity and the over-complicated mess that we have made of our modern world. I was thinking just yesterday of how little time I feel I have now with all of the new technology that is meant to improve our quality of life. All those moments when, before the expectation of constant connectivity, I would just sit in my own thoughts and with a slow air and no thought of what was next.

And your poem has a bit of this about it. There was once...thought and deliberation and respect for something greater than ourselves. Reverence of nature. Amateur scientists abounded and in exploring the world in their own curiosities brought us many discoveries that have changed our world. Now we are devoted to the capitalist decree that happiness can be bought. And as such, we are willing to watch the beauty of the natural world fade to feed our frenzies.

I think our time of quarantine has reminded us in many ways that there is more to life than the rush and that thoughtfulness has an intrinsic value that we shouldn't discount. I love your nod to Poirot and think he would definitely implore us to think more carefully about who and what we align ourselves with. This is a great poem, Beccy. Almost like a manifesto for going forward from the moment we find ourselves in. Let us hope we have the courage to change for good.

Posted 3 Years Ago


This is a wonderful poem Beccy, both decrying our subjugation of nature but also giving us the hope of dreaming again and finding a new way forward. I have felt this strongly myself during our current predicament. We have found renewed delight in nature and also enjoying consuming less - also missing much but mainly the human contact. Your poem is full of luscious images - the last hippie, the Ikea tree etc. etc. There is hope for us if we can dream like this!
Take care,
Alan

Posted 3 Years Ago



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Added on May 25, 2020
Last Updated on April 15, 2022

Author

Beccy
Beccy

United Kingdom



About
I'm forty four, single and have a lovely fifteen year old son called Charlie. I've been writing poetry and short stories since I can remember. I have always been an assiduous reader of poetry and real.. more..

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