Whistling Frank
All the doorknobs shine.
All the corridors are blue.
And I am Frank.
Sometimes I’m not sure
who I am. But today
I’m Frank
walking along a blue corridor
conducting a mock-examination
of my reflection
in the doorknob's golden gleam.
I was not always like this.
I worked on a farm and whistled
and had more hair.
I was easygoing and married
to Jean.
I follow the corridor
and think of Jean
alive under the button moon
and of my brother who hanged himself
after the war.
Did I introduce myself?
I’m Martin. Martin Frank.
They call me Mr Martin.
Settle down Frank, they say.
Getting my name wrong.
I miss Jean. I’m eighty-six
and was not always like this.
Once I came home from work, tired,
and she said, ‘Get the coal in Frank.’
She hadn’t even made the fire.
I swore.
We laughed about it
afterwards.
Sometimes I drive my knuckles into my face.
Sometimes I drive my knuckles
into my face
and wonder where I am.
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