I’m reading books about reading this month (OMG so meta, so fun) & an element repeatedly brought up is not wanting to turn the light out on a book that’s thrilling you & sneak reading under covers. It affects readers across the spectrum. So I thought I’d attempt a poem exploring my experience of it — in a short lined conversational style similar to the YA verse novel I’m reading (Inside Out & Back Again by Vietnamese American poet Thanhha Lai).
This then very quickly lead to an interesting Factoid about the other kind of torch you probably think of when you think torches & stories of the 76 Montreal Games Olympic flame going out & needing to be relit with a cigarette lighter of all things (haha). When I sought verification of this story from other sources, I came across a home grown torch story I’d never heard of. One that was even better.
*****
light’s (sorta) out
being an owlish teenager
in a cock-a-doodle-do household
meant getting creative
to ensure the reading got done
i secretly saved pocket
money for several weeks
pretending i’d always spent
slightly more than i had
so on one after-school shopping
spree i was able to procure
a small hand held torch
without mum observing
unfortunately my maths
illiterate mind hadn’t
factored batteries
into the equation
but a fortnight or so
later i had the power
to continue the story
even after the official edict
light’s out always came too soon
however now i could resume
adventures after a discreet
interval either under covers or above
soon realised batteries don’t last
long when used often & so
a rechargeable system was
acquired in similar fashion
& sure — there were
occasional altercations
between parent & progeny
shouting matches & such
about sleep v school yet
the system was extremely
efficient & the illicit joy
it delivered immeasurable
~
there are many fine things
to being an adult (& several
that totally suck) — but leaving
lights on as long as i like. wow.
LEDs will last forever & so
i drift asleep book in hand,
finger in page, glasses still on
dream for as long as needed
then wake up & resume
from wherever i’d wafted off
my teenage self & my flabbier
celled successor both agree
— this is living
*****
Day 14 Factoid – torches of all kinds
true Olympic spirit
in 56 : a future vet
presented a fake torch
— made of a chair leg
painted silver : still wet
a plum pudding can :
& a pair of : burning
jocks : soaked in kero —
to the mayor of Sydney
who proceeded : to speechify
while the protesting
prankster : slipped
silkily : into the crowd
& away
the following day
just before : taking an exam
his peers rose to their : feet
applauding : their approval
the results of that test
are : less triumphant
