Poem
James Harpur
My Father\'s Flat
My Father\'s Flat
My Father\'s Flat
Tugging apart the curtains every dayHe always saw, three stories up, a grand
Sweep of the Thames, the trees of Battersea
And, squatting there, the Japanese pagoda –
Inflaming, a parody of a bandstand,
Its four sides flaunting a golden Buddha.
It glowed like a lantern near the glitzy braid
Of Albert Bridge at night.
If he had crossed
The river he might have heard Renounce the world
Escape the gilded lips or seen Gautama lying
In mortal sleep, his face relaxed, his flesh released;
Even in death, teaching the art of dying.
At night, across the river two golden eyes burn
Into the heavy velvet of the curtain.
© 1996, James Harpur
From: The Monk\'s Dream
Publisher: Anvil Press Poetry, London
From: The Monk\'s Dream
Publisher: Anvil Press Poetry, London
Poems
Poems of James Harpur
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My Father\'s Flat
Tugging apart the curtains every dayHe always saw, three stories up, a grand
Sweep of the Thames, the trees of Battersea
And, squatting there, the Japanese pagoda –
Inflaming, a parody of a bandstand,
Its four sides flaunting a golden Buddha.
It glowed like a lantern near the glitzy braid
Of Albert Bridge at night.
If he had crossed
The river he might have heard Renounce the world
Escape the gilded lips or seen Gautama lying
In mortal sleep, his face relaxed, his flesh released;
Even in death, teaching the art of dying.
At night, across the river two golden eyes burn
Into the heavy velvet of the curtain.
From: The Monk\'s Dream
My Father\'s Flat
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