
Jan Oskar Hansen,
PT
|
Free
Verse
Family
Tree (working class)
The
branches of my Family Tree go back
several generations of factory workers, bakers,
smithies and farmhands, but there is not even
a ruddy alcoholic to liven up the endless monotony
of
working class dreary ordinariness, this awful
blandness.
Would it not be nice if one of them had been a
killer—
hanged—a
rebel against an unjust society. ...Or a thief
who stole from the rich and gave the loot to the
poor.
My great, great, grandfather was a rouge—no
he was
a saddle maker…and his wife was a seamstress, not
a famous courtesan, who had kings begging for more!
I´m a member of a boring dynasty who lived and loved
harming no one...surviving and working their butts
off...
doing boring things. And that is way I´m proud of
them,
because they are the true keepers of a civilized
society.
My only consolation is that mother knew Willy Brant.
Church
Bells
I lived
in a charming English village,
near an ancient church; every Sunday
morning on my only day off, the bloody bells chimed.
Once I thought I saw a woman cycling
to mass in the mist, and it wasn´t Germaine Greer.
When Muslims ruled Andalusia, they tolerated
Christians, but a poet of that time—Ibn
Baqi...
circa 1059 1112, wished they wouldn´t clang the
bells
so hard waking him up when the air was cool...
and his sleep so sweet—then
his Christian mistress
had to get up and go to mass.
So far nothing has changed, dear Ibn Baqi,
the bells keep on tolling.
The
Daughter
The
daughter, of a police officer who wore black riding
boots,
was shining them—a
call came—he
had been killed....
a traffic accident. She put polish and brush into a
cupboard—
no longer the slave
of a father who used boots as mirrors
in the morning when shaving, and if he couldn´t see
clearly
he beat her with a leather strap. Father in his coffin—
she polished his
medals; he looked grand in death.
But for the daughter, of the officer each medal
reminded her of the leather lash.
Ageing
I saw a
picture of him in the newspaper...the famous writer
at seventy-two, and thought: my god, he looks old; yet
I´m
older than him. He was going on about his illnesses like
they
should be badges of honour. I look like him, but my
mirror
says I look not a day over fifty-two which is a
blessing.
We are all narcissists at heart and stuck with an image
of
ourselves that is untrue, but life cannot rob us of our
delusion.
A warning though, do not smile to women who have not got
a wrinkle or two and need to dye their hair.
The boy was running through a dark tunnel hoping to see
light...
there is supposed to be a light at the end of every dark
tunnel.
The man got hold of the boy´s jacket...
insistently called him a sweet boy....
the boy was defenseless...
the man said all I want to do is love you...
the boy was throwing up blood...
the man had his way, unbearable...
but the boy wrestled lose...
At Sunday
school the boy saw the man, a priest,
preaching about sin and forgiveness.
Frightened and sore from his assault the boy said
nothing.
Ten years
later the boy, now a young man,
saw the priest leave a bus and he beat the daylight
out of him. Blood on the pavement—
the young man got two years for assaulting a priest—
no one asked him…why?
Forty years later the truth about the man came out...
the rape victim was given a monetary compensation
and the trivial word…closure.
When told the story I was irked: the priest was promoted
to bishop and received a fat pension. I know when his
obituary
is written his perversity will be ignored, his work
among
the poor will be accentuated, and his profile, in stone,
will overlook a kindergarten.

|
|