Muse
Estill Pollock
Memories like gun dogs trotting
back through briars—yet, others remote
as weather in a far country
In those days in Paris
you could reach me on Balzac 51-04
through the old Exchange—I still recall the sound
of the telephone, the bell’s cranky burr
ragged as Tibetan prayer flags
It was the time I was writing
my novel, the first one
no one wanted, and I sank the last
of my money in a private edition
from a printer with no English
When he set the type, if
in doubt, French phrasing trumped
shortcomings to my style, chapters
now a running order
the Dadaists thought daring, disregarding
fame’s fragile light and shade
Journalists telephoned, a curiosity
about choices between nuance and La Grand Parade
Then, later, rumours of the printer’s daughter
ghosting proofs, her patient
Iterations, love’s slang tamped wily
by the inking racks
About the Author
Estill Pollock’s publications include Constructing the Human (Poetry Salzburg) and the book cycle Relic Environments Trilogy (Cinnamon Press, Wales). His poetry collections in the series Cartographic Projections of a Sphere—Entropy, Time Signatures, Ark, Heathen Anthems, and Alias—are published by Broadstone Books. The e-chapbooks And Then and Working Title are published by Mudlark.
