Ruth Lasters
FLOWER
White flannels with which you wash your old father
harden in the night into envelopes for
unwritten letters to each other (one day there’ll be a machine, Pa,
which with electrodes on the scalp will register and print out
the epistles you wrote only in your thoughts, never noted down. So they
will lie after your last breath in a pile exactly
your own length). For God’s sake, keep your legs still, Father!
Perhaps there grows in the brains of parents who are changed
unnaturally by their child, an image of always the same
weird, impossible flower – draw it in the steamy mirror –
like a new species of flower runs riot after
nuclear radiation.
BLOEM
BLOEM
Witte washanden waarmee je wast je oude vader
verharden ’s nachts tot omslagen voor
ongeschreven brieven naar elkaar (ooit komt er een machine, pa,
die ze met elektroden op de hoofdhuid registreert en uitprint
de epistels die je slechts schreef in gedachten, nooit noteerde. Ze liggen
daar dan na je laatste adem in een stapel van exact jouw
lichaamslengte). In godsnaam, hou je benen stil, vader!
Misschien groeit er in hersenen van ouders die verschoond worden
tegennatuurlijk door hun kind, een beeld van steeds dezelfde
bizarre, onbestaande bloem – teken ze in de spiegeldamp –
zoals een nieuwe plantensoort woekert na
kernstraling.
From: Lichtmeters
Publisher: Polis,
FLOWER
White flannels with which you wash your old father
harden in the night into envelopes for
unwritten letters to each other (one day there’ll be a machine, Pa,
which with electrodes on the scalp will register and print out
the epistles you wrote only in your thoughts, never noted down. So they
will lie after your last breath in a pile exactly
your own length). For God’s sake, keep your legs still, Father!
Perhaps there grows in the brains of parents who are changed
unnaturally by their child, an image of always the same
weird, impossible flower – draw it in the steamy mirror –
like a new species of flower runs riot after
nuclear radiation.
FLOWER
White flannels with which you wash your old father
harden in the night into envelopes for
unwritten letters to each other (one day there’ll be a machine, Pa,
which with electrodes on the scalp will register and print out
the epistles you wrote only in your thoughts, never noted down. So they
will lie after your last breath in a pile exactly
your own length). For God’s sake, keep your legs still, Father!
Perhaps there grows in the brains of parents who are changed
unnaturally by their child, an image of always the same
weird, impossible flower – draw it in the steamy mirror –
like a new species of flower runs riot after
nuclear radiation.