I have become the smaller flag on a ship,

the shorter rafters of a roof, a knave
in a pack of cards. I wear a skimpy coat,
tall leather boot, and leather drinking flask.
 
I am captured in a child’s game
and hit when grown men gamble.
I am what they call a tame ape.
I was a common man
 
whose job was to lift weight.
Mechanical devices that replaced
my muscles took my job and pay
and more—they took my human name.
 
And I, who used to pull
my master’s boots, hoist meat
and turn the spit, work the roller
and the winch, climb the steeple,
 
strike the bell, and connect lines
in telephone exchange, am a daw,
the tiniest of crows, gathering
loose sticks to nest in castle ruins.
 
The solace of six centuries—and still—
is once, on a high and windy hill,
beside a well that was clear and full,
I kissed a girl named Gylle.

Previously published in Poetry Magazine
and Eye to the Telescope

 
Forums: