Poem
Adam Wyeth
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We started in Africa, the world at our fingertips,dropped in on your house in Zimbabwe; threading
our way north out of Harare into the suburbs,
magnifying the streets—the forms of things unknown,
till we spotted your mum’s white Mercedes parked
in the driveway; seeming—more strange than true,
the three of us huddled round a monitor in Streatham,
you pointed out the swimming pool and stables.
We whizzed out, looking down on our blue planet,
then like gods—zoomed in towards Ireland—
taking the road west from Cork to Kinsale,
following the Bandon river through Innishannon,
turning off and leapfrogging over farms
to find our home framed in fields of barley;
enlarged the display to see our sycamore’s leaves
waving back. Then with the touch of a button,
we were smack bang in Central London,
tracing our footsteps earlier in the day, walking
the wobbly bridge between St Paul’s and Tate Modern;
the London Eye staring majestically over the Thames.
South through Brixton into Streatham—
one sees more devils than vast hell can hold—
the blank expressions of millions of roofs gazing
squarely up at us, while we made our way down
the avenue, as if we were trying to sneak up
on ourselves; till there we were right outside the door:
the lunatic, the lover and the poet—peeping through
the computer screen like a window to our souls.
© 2010, Adam Wyeth
From: Landing Places: Immigrant Poets in Ireland
Publisher: Dedalus Press, Dublin
From: Landing Places: Immigrant Poets in Ireland
Publisher: Dedalus Press, Dublin
Poems
Poems of Adam Wyeth
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We started in Africa, the world at our fingertips,dropped in on your house in Zimbabwe; threading
our way north out of Harare into the suburbs,
magnifying the streets—the forms of things unknown,
till we spotted your mum’s white Mercedes parked
in the driveway; seeming—more strange than true,
the three of us huddled round a monitor in Streatham,
you pointed out the swimming pool and stables.
We whizzed out, looking down on our blue planet,
then like gods—zoomed in towards Ireland—
taking the road west from Cork to Kinsale,
following the Bandon river through Innishannon,
turning off and leapfrogging over farms
to find our home framed in fields of barley;
enlarged the display to see our sycamore’s leaves
waving back. Then with the touch of a button,
we were smack bang in Central London,
tracing our footsteps earlier in the day, walking
the wobbly bridge between St Paul’s and Tate Modern;
the London Eye staring majestically over the Thames.
South through Brixton into Streatham—
one sees more devils than vast hell can hold—
the blank expressions of millions of roofs gazing
squarely up at us, while we made our way down
the avenue, as if we were trying to sneak up
on ourselves; till there we were right outside the door:
the lunatic, the lover and the poet—peeping through
the computer screen like a window to our souls.
From: Landing Places: Immigrant Poets in Ireland
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