The Long World.

The Long World.

A Poem by Ken Simm.
"

Someone coming.

"

The memory of a song thrush singing sometime in my personal history. A love of nature alone.

Wet days with slanting rain. When Icarus could not fly. Then I wished through my books.  Literature as an object desired. My language. 

Walks along the ridgeline. Wishing for someone to show this to.

I’ve played this part so many times. When I was young and lived in this land.

 When I was young and convinced of the rightness of things.

These were my joys. I considered them once.

I heard the voices that weren’t there and I watched the landscapes change. I spoke only when the sun rose and slept when it set. I dreamed of a world with you. I didn’t know who you were but I watched the wild horizon for changes, for hopes.

My position in the world changed. I learned and then I trained but still I didn’t know.

 I knew that Leda loved her swans. I knew the rightness of looking. I watched the light on water shine into your imaginary eyes. I heard the gentlest of sighs from someone just out of sight. I learned the music of seeing.

 This river of my past changed in the shadows of evening falling. The last of the sunlight drifting across my single thoughts. The forest blew its wind thinking. These gestalt statements set in the filigreed branches of trees and matters of childish perception. The last insects falling golden into space

The swan almost singing. The dissection of it by candlelight. The running away from bent drunks.

Hiding from drunken violence as the deep sun appeared from behind ominous grey clouds building in a frightening sky. Finding a landscape of natural safety in a world of childhood fear.

The visits of the spirit. The first thoughts on the first love. The invisible monster crashing through the woodland.  The first of my secret places.

A kingfisher, halcyon still on my foot, fishing. Dry days and a weasel friend. The rafts of summer, tied with old stolen rope. The illness and the still seeking why.

The strut stuttering illness when it all went away. When I grew slanted.

The small deaths and the painting of a portrait. A teal in my room. Another bird in the shed leaning towards its own death. He likes birds, they said.

The single dead tree in a lake. A dog hanging from it. A river of green and high flowers. The secret small paths of Moorhen and willow.

The old rusting car where she showed me. The words I discovered that no-one else knew. A girl shining.

Concertos and symphonies played and scratched. Then taken and destroyed. He learns too much. He is, he will be, a drooling idiot. The words burned in a heathen temper

When Grendel was a hero of my life. Tricks from a magician with string. Show them to you with the words written.

These perceptions hit my childhood emotions and flowered into darkness.

I watched an animal die in the last of the sunset.

I saw all the young males hunting.

Drawing a first love and not knowing it wasn’t real until now when the love was suddenly there and here.

Making a drawing of it, the first love.

And finding someone finally to show it to. Only now

See, look. This is me.

I rejoiced to hear strange movement in the dark places of my soul. And I listened for the monsters amongst the trees. These were my joys. My loves before you.

Manning the falcon. Flying. Secrets.  No one remembered, but one, saying I love you.

She died.

The votes then of my feet in each step away from home. Away from my familiar landscape. Finally away from my country. Nothing here for me in any tense or intent. Only ghosts silently covering land across the dusk. An owl in the silent fading light. Hunting for the joys of my life.

Foreign places and learning. Learning how to please and starving in the holidays. The high hot south and the sunflowers. The Latin and the arguments. The large, slow history river catching an afternoon sun.

The larger deaths. And preferring them alone. Still not showing.

Then quietly, slowly, gently, the return, knowing more. The strings of a sunrise capturing my fading heart. The wonder coming with the light. Appearing on a horizon of loose hopes. The birdsong repeated. The start of loving myself once more.

Hints of you out there in the fields, waiting. A brief fragrance hiding on a soft breeze. A kiss in the late afternoon. And a joy in the wonder of knowing.

You came. Then you were here in bright loveliness. We loved and were gossamer  fine. And I showed you all the wonders of my experience. The joys of my long world. Then you saw and then you loved me.

 

© 2013 Ken Simm.


Author's Note

Ken Simm.
The photo is mine and is called The Pond. Leda was seduced by Zeus in the form of a Swan. Everybody knows of Icarus. A teal is a small diving duck. This one was a brightly plumaged male.

My Review

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Featured Review

Where do I start? This is enchanting, Ken. You`ve produced a window into your mind - of your volition and your raison d`etre that`s a poetic synopsis for your autobiography that makes me want to take it from you and write it as your biography. Thanks for sharing this, mate. P.

Posted 10 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I did didn't I. Ooops. Won't do it again Pete, sorry.
Thanks for the wonderful review my mate.



Reviews

What a good mix of mythology and a metaphoric life lived. That last line has one catching their breath and holding it for a beat or two and then releasing it in a happy sigh of relief.

Beautiful wording and imagery woven all thought this. :)

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Rogue

10 Years Ago

Sorry, I meant the metaphor between using the mythology and your life. My wording is off today it se.. read more
Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I'm just glad you found the time to read and understand so well. Leda loves swans was a piece of gra.. read more
Rogue

10 Years Ago

I promise to come back when my head is not so fuzzy and read more. :)
Ken, this was amazing and took my mind on a travel with you and your wonderful words. Life is filled with oictures and ohotographs and you my friend seem to capture them in any media you touched. Very nice, this one brought my home again.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I'm glad it brought you home Jack. Thank you for those brilliant words.
"Hints of you out there in the fields, waiting. A brief fragrance hiding on a soft breeze. A kiss in the late afternoon. And a joy in the wonder of knowing.

You came. Then you were here in bright loveliness. We loved and were gossamer fine. And I showed you all the wonders of my experience. The joys of my long world. Then you saw and then you loved me."

I felt moved by every beautiful line of intense emotions and imagery like the other reviewer said like a window or scenes unfolding. I'm so glad it ended that way...Bravo...:)



Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

Its still going Sami. Has not ended, has only just begun in fact. Thank you so much for your wonderf.. read more
Sami Khalil

10 Years Ago

Understood. Good to know...Have a great one...:)
"When I was young and convinced of the rightness of things.
These were my joys. I considered them once."
I like the above lines a lot. A good journey into life and experiences. I like the positive ending.
"Then you saw and then you loved me."
Thank you for the amazing poetry.
Coyote

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

Thank you so much for all the encouragement and support my friend. You are more than generous.
' This river of my past changed in the shadows of evening falling. The last of the sunlight drifting across my single thoughts. The forest blew its wind thinking. These gestalt statements set in the filigreed branches of trees and matters of childish perception. The last insects falling golden into space '

If that's how you saw and see your place in life, then, in spite of the some time darkness in this post, your world's out of the world the rest of us know. Your writing has such a mix of gravitas and fragility. Is beautiful.

The words: The birdsong repeated. The start of loving myself once more.' is like a welcome to living again - and more.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I saw shapes and worlds in the branches of the blowing trees Emma and I connected them to what I rea.. read more
I like this, what I really like is the classical background with Leda and Icarus, then the focus on the image of a river with moorhens,willows,fields. Perhaps I have been reading too much Ted Hughes, but the more poetry I read the more I understand the importance of using natural imagery, birds, plants, animals, it is ( I think ) the motor of the best poetry. A fine prose poem.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

Its about the inspirations that interested me when young Leslie. Its about why people thought I was .. read more
Then I read you and I loved you, this is like reading your life to sweet music on the page Ken, just a magical read. Do you like swans so much because they mate for life?

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

What wonderful things to say Frieda. I like the legend of the Swan Song more than anything. I once d.. read more
Frieda P

10 Years Ago

I could have lived without knowing the dissection part, still love ya!
Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

http://www.writerscafe.org/writing/Ken%20Simm/678047/. If you are interested. Smirk.
I found this to be both heartbreaking and inspiring, both at the same time. And there is this wave of longing, a journey to collect as much beauty and purity the poet could find (remember) and to store it all in a safe place; your letters, your art. Thank you for sharing this with us.

Diego

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

The inspirations. The why's and wherefores and the wishes for someone to share with. That's it Diego.. read more
Where do I start? This is enchanting, Ken. You`ve produced a window into your mind - of your volition and your raison d`etre that`s a poetic synopsis for your autobiography that makes me want to take it from you and write it as your biography. Thanks for sharing this, mate. P.

Posted 10 Years Ago


2 of 2 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I did didn't I. Ooops. Won't do it again Pete, sorry.
Thanks for the wonderful review my mate.
Exceptional work young man. Most impressive.

Posted 10 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

Thank you Mrs Hat. I'm glad you liked it.
Mrs Edith Hat

10 Years Ago

Understated Sir. Understated.
Ken Simm.

10 Years Ago

I'm so glad you like it.

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789 Views
20 Reviews
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Shelved in 3 Libraries
Added on May 30, 2013
Last Updated on May 31, 2013
Tags: love, lives, memoir, memory, romance, looking, nature, boy, child, childhood, history, biography, old, thinking, story

Author

Ken Simm.
Ken Simm.

Scotland, United Kingdom



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