In a Psychiatric Ward
by Powis
Posted: Monday, February 2, 2004 Word Count: 144 Summary: I wrote this after a brief stay in the psychiatric ward of the Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead. The 'cure' in my case was seeing others in a far worse state than I. The cure, in fact, was compassion, towards myself and my fellow sufferers. |
All have their dream of healing.
Waking to birdsong, leaf-light, dawn
bursting like a sack of wheat; or
gently buoyed in perfumed water,
to emerge, towelled and smiling,
helpless beneath anointing hands.
Not this corridor of polished ice,
lit by a striplight’s epileptic
shudder, a gleaming dance floor
where you are your only partner,
your only dance, a thorazine shuffle.
Here you pace out what little space
your mind allows. Elsewhere, others
escape into pain, precise, negotiable:
carcinoma, malign perhaps, but
a language we can still pronounce.
Words cannot survive here,
not at this depth,
they curl at the edges,
snap, become their origins,
a cry, the scream you were born with.
In this fraternity of strangers,
love is masked in a simple truth
and schooled in the torturer’s art –
you part the flesh to find the bone.
Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead 1986
Waking to birdsong, leaf-light, dawn
bursting like a sack of wheat; or
gently buoyed in perfumed water,
to emerge, towelled and smiling,
helpless beneath anointing hands.
Not this corridor of polished ice,
lit by a striplight’s epileptic
shudder, a gleaming dance floor
where you are your only partner,
your only dance, a thorazine shuffle.
Here you pace out what little space
your mind allows. Elsewhere, others
escape into pain, precise, negotiable:
carcinoma, malign perhaps, but
a language we can still pronounce.
Words cannot survive here,
not at this depth,
they curl at the edges,
snap, become their origins,
a cry, the scream you were born with.
In this fraternity of strangers,
love is masked in a simple truth
and schooled in the torturer’s art –
you part the flesh to find the bone.
Royal Free Hospital, Hampstead 1986