A Heath-Robinson Solution For A Broken Heart
I’m Over You Like Clockwork
In the dankness of the cellar
where the dust isn’t rude but there to be expected,
I’d uncovered a battered brown suitcase
a treasure chest of short trousered memories.
Inside was a clockwork train set that Beecham
would have axed because the track went in a circle;
never went there but always came back.
A Meccano set, thrown into a scrapyard box
of wheels, nuts and bolts, and incomplete robots.
Crashed Dinky cars that had flown from walls
or mangled into each other like stock car jousters,
a rusty penknife, deflated leather football,
ripping yarns from torn Boys Own Annuals.
That night, on the kitchen table,
with tiny spanners in my large fingers,
I stripped out the clockwork motor from the train
and used the Meccano to build a framework
for its new housing. With the rusty penknife,
that I had honed on the stone step by the back door,
(like I had done all those years before)
I performed open heart surgery. Transplanted
my broken heart with this new clockwork replica.
I stitched up my chest,
with the lace from the football
leaving just a tiny keyhole. I keep the key
around my neck like a 00 gauge crucifix.
At night,
now I no longer hear the gentle midnight sleepings
of your soft breathing, I listen to the whirring
sound of my blood going ‘round,
and feel rather proud
of my abilities to make do and mend.
© 2007 P.A.Levy
First published by The Beat 2009