Sunday, November 15, 2015

AN AFTERNOON WITH ERIC SATIE



To hear Trois Gymnopedies

transports me to a Parisian café

on a lustrous Sunday afternoon

sometime in May

Perhaps it is

the Foret Noir with wood beams

bisecting the ceiling, or along

rue Royale amongst widows and artists

Cylinders of sunlight

fall across the table

like ruffles on a schoolgirl’s petticoat

cups of espresso

belligerent and hot

fuel our desultory conversations

straining to be heard

along the Champ Elysee

above the chattering

of taxis and bicycles that provide

a throbbing counterpoint to the

sweet hum of a piano sonata

notes dripping

like crystal raindrops on marble

amidst curls of cigarette smoke

and the chimerical kiss of absinthe

Women with Lautrec faces

amble by drenched in Dior

framed by a sunset awash

with the tint of an ebullient Beaujolais

And when the music stops

as it invariably must



I sip the last of my espresso



and revel in Cocteau’s whimsy

 



2 comments:

  1. Holy shit, Conrad. That was/is awesome. Aside from the fact that the poem is lyrical and creative, in the middle somewhere I realized that I was oblivious to the fact that I have had a long and often close relationship with the author. I've read his stuff in the past and never had that experience. Thank you, Conrad. You are a writer, but I wouldn't brag about it. Lazarus says, "Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of--but do it in private and wash your hands afterwards."

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  2. I left out the best part, or maybe not so because it wasn't there. I hadn't read four or five lines when I started to look for the link to "Trois Gymnopedies" so I could experience what you was expressing.

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