I call my house from a cellphone.
I’ve just seen a girl in an empty parking lot.
We used to think something of each other,
if she’s the right person. I call to check on
couches, pans, pots; I wonder if light still reflects.
In childhood, it was a real question whether
a party went on without me, or do toys move
when they are alone? Is the world swallowed
by solipsism, right down to the smallest object?
A music box's insides must need surgery
every now and then. Carousel horses can stare
the whole day long. A man from UPS stands on my lawn
quiet as a curling disc over a glass chessboard, he delivers
a product by foreign women in factories who finger
ribbons and eye the windows more than average.
There are more than just finite and infinite games;
sometimes even a hearse is warm when thinking indoors.
Comments
Nice images.
Nice images.
I did not catch the connecting theme though.
It doesn't have to be a take home message.
But something maybe even irrational that brings them together.
I like the part where you questioned the existence of the world outside yourself. I think you were on the right track asking.
The whole poem
is about solipsism and relativity.