The news about the first photograph of a black hole reminded me of my villanelle, "Multiverse", first published in Think: A Journal of Poetry, Criticism, and Reviews, Spring 2017, Volume 7.2.
The poem will appear in my forthcoming book, Pointing Home (Kelsay Books, 2019). Here is the explanatory note:
Multiverse.
George F. R. Ellis, philosopher and cosmologist, remains skeptical of the
existence of the multiverse. Nevertheless, he writes: Parallel universes may or may not exist; the case is unproved. We are
going to have to live with that uncertainty.— from “Does the Multiverse Really Exist?”, Scientific
American (August 2011). Beth Davidson was a childhood friend of John
Lennon and the inspiration for the line about the pretty nurse in the song Penny Lane. Beth Davidson went on
to marry John’s best friend, Pete Shotton, and she remained a member of the
Beatles’ close circle of friends until her death from cancer at the age of
thirty-five.
Multiverse
i.m. Beth Davidson Shotton
And
though she feels as if she’s in a play,
she
is anyway.―John Lennon, Penny Lane
The pretty nurse in Penny Lane is dead.
She played her part until the
curtain fell.
Or is her troupe booked somewhere
else instead?
Although those notes are earworms
in my head—
the trumpet solo and the engine
bell—
the pretty nurse in Penny Lane is dead.
The barber and the banker long
since fled
the roundabout. The fireman as
well.
Can they be working somewhere else
instead?
The neighborhood’s a tourist trap,
it’s said;
no poppies like the ones she used
to sell.
The pretty nurse in Penny Lane is dead.
Or is she? Maybe we have been
misled,
and other Penny Lanes spin,
parallel,
in quantum time, to other tunes
instead.
I’m clinging to one final, chronon
shred
of hope. As far as anyone can tell,
the pretty nurse in Penny Lane is dead,
and may be living somewhere else
instead.
No comments:
Post a Comment