"But first, baby, as you climb and count the stairs (and they total the same), did you, sometime or somewhere, have a different idea?
Is this, baby, what you were born to feel, and do, and be?"

-Kenneth Fearing



Thursday, March 22, 2012

High Noon



The noonday train will bring Frank Miller.
If I’m a man I must be brave
And I must face that deadly killer
Or lie a coward, a craven coward,
Or lie a coward in my grave.


-Do Not Forsake Me [The Ballad of High Noon]  by Ned Washington


We weren’t exactly friends, I’ve said.

But, that isn't exactly right or wasn't always.

We were once. The dislike we grew into



was only possible through some knowledge

and sometimes, even then, it changed.

I still don’t know all the reasons, motivations,


how much was you or me, how much just routine.

The things you said, weren’t all untrue, but still,

I know they felt like truth, for you,


so wrapped up in your scheming,

you couldn’t help but convolute a line.

I couldn’t help but call you on it,


when you sat with the kitchen lights out,

drinking black coffee, sighing out storm clouds

until I couldn’t help but hear you.


You were angry at being confronted.

But what else was there to do?

High Noon, you said later, called me Will Kane


to your Frank Miller. You said, “There’s nothing

noble about saving those who don’t deserve it.”

But let’s go to the clock on the wall again,


the train coming closer. You meet it,

or trail what you didn’t do behind you.

I thought someday we’d patch things up,


laugh about Marshals, trains and villains,

because nothing is ever as easy as that.

But the clock on the wall kept ticking


life kept going, and so easily, you were a part

of the past. A couple more ticks and you were gone.

I wish it were more like a movie,


the unresolved wrapped up by the end,

but it’s never as easy as that. You were

your own Will Kane, your own Frank Miller.


You had your train, your clock. There's little I could add,

except to say that I'd side with John Wayne if I could,

this time, and have your Sheriff be the one from Rio Bravo.

                           

                                  -Brent Allard

4 comments:

  1. Brilliant, as always. I like how you began it with another poem, it really put it in context.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Emm! Glad it came through for you. I wanted to give that little preface for anyone not familiar with the premise. I hate to exclude anyone!

      Delete
  2. It seems like you have to be a gunslinger to be in a relationship! Insightful. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks Sweepy! Well, at least for this one particular relationship...

    ReplyDelete