Friday, September 2, 2022

Truant

CLICK HERE TO HEAR AUTHOR READ


September sharpness in the air

summer's end

hurricane season and

la rentrée scolaire

boxy yellow buses

red lights flashing

block traffic flow

kid faces pressed against glass

their paperbag lunches 

stinking of tunafish and egg salad;

the time of year

I feel the truant 

my thoughts turn rebellious

my body aches 

to break out

of life's schoolyard fence

soul fills with wanderlust

and the world is a whirlwind 

carrying particles of freedom

a scent that were I not feeling 

so penned-in 

like soon-to-be table meat

I would collect in myself

breathe in and sing out

delight in and run with 

call to anyone with ears

inclined to hear it: 

Damn your policy 

and forced education 

I live for truth!

4 comments:

Ken Stollon said...

A recent NYT opinion article (dated Sept 3rd) asked the question, "What is school for?" and came up with some interesting answers. Although seen by some as a waste of time and a waste of money, others see school as a source of hope for immigrant children, as a place to learn to read, as a way to connect to nature (which is ironic because when I read your poem I thought of Wordsworth's poem "The Tables Turned," in which he rejects book-learning for the more meaningful experience of connecting to Nature), as a place to learn about caring and how to become a good citizen, and as a vehicle for upward mobility. In my Jewish upbringing, truancy was a dirty word, almost like being a gangster. But as an older person I can definitely relate to the idea of being a truant, of breaking free from the societal norms and expectations, or at the very least fantasizing about it. Anyway, I think your poem does a good job of evoking that feeling of wanting to raise one's middle finger to the establishment. There's a spirit of rebelliousness in this poem! So, bravo! And it contains some nice images and turns of phrase. "boxy yellow buses" "their paperbag lunches/stinking of tunafish and egg salad" "break out/of life's schoolyard fence" "carrying particles of freedom" "soon-to-be table meat" ... those are some beauts! Rock on, bro!

B. Glen Rotchin said...

I must say I didn't know that Wordsworth poem and looked it up. Thank you for drawing my attention to it. What a wonderful poem. Yes, it does have a similar spirit. I bet there are plenty more - so now you`ve got me on a treasure hunt to find them.

Ken Stollon said...

Glad I could turn you on to some Wordsworth! ; )

I think there are tons of poems with a rebellious spirit, but I can't think of another poem that lauds truancy! You might have actually broken new ground with your poem!

After writing this, I googled "poems about truancy" and there are actually a few out there (but not many!). Here's one that I liked which resonates with your poem ... I really like the last line!

Truant
BY MARGARET HASSE

Our high school principal wagged his finger
over two manila folders
lying on his desk, labeled with our names—
my boyfriend and me—
called to his office for skipping school.

The day before, we ditched Latin and world history
to chase shadows of clouds on a motorcycle.
We roared down rolling asphalt roads
through the Missouri River bottoms
beyond town, our heads emptied
of review tests and future plans.

We stopped on a dirt lane to hear
a meadowlark’s liquid song, smell
heart-break blossom of wild plum.
Beyond leaning fence posts and barbwire,
a tractor drew straight lines across the field
unfurling its cape of blackbirds.

Now forty years after that geography lesson
in spring, I remember the principal’s words.
How right he was in saying:
This will be part of
your permanent record.

Glen said...

Ha! Clever ending. Poignant. Now that you've got me thinking (what else is new) there are plenty of truants in literature and art: Artful Dodger (and his gang), Tom Sawyer, Holden Caulfield and my personal favourite Ferris Bueller, immediately come to mind. So why not more poems about truants?