by Brett Rutherford
after Barbara A. Holland
The letters of the alphabet
frighten me terribly.
They are sly, shameless
demons, and dangerous!
You open the inkwell
to release them, and off
they go. How will you ever
get control of them again?
Coming to life, they join,
separate. They ignore commands,
arranging themselves
on the paper, serif'd black
with horns and tails.
You scream at them
and implore in vain.
They do as they please,
preening and pairing up
shamelessly before you.
They gleefully expose
what you had hoped to conceal,
yet they refuse to voice
the truth that struggles deep
in your bowels, that one thing
you want to share with
all of Mankind.
Why time and again
I took up this quill,
why time and again
I abandoned the act
of writing. Things,
if they are to be said at all
must be said in letters,
the little devils whose
conjunct joinings alone
make words that are more
than exclamations. The gods
must forgive me if "O!"
cannot convey my message.
Demons of the alphabet,
come take my hand.
Eyes closed, I cannot do this;
eyes open, I risk
the heart attack
of seeing what I say
too late to smudge
the fatal words away.
(based on a 1971-72 journal entry by Barbara A. Holland)
Wonderful! This poem needs to be widely shared, especially among students.
ReplyDeleteabsolutely brilliant the complete guide to the behavior of letters.
ReplyDelete