“Couldn’t Fall in Edinburgh” by Daniel Bliss
Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Couldn’t Fall in Edinburgh” by Daniel Bliss, part of the League’s Fresh Voices program.
Couldn’t Fall in Edinburgh
By Daniel Bliss
Stayed four extra weeks on Union Place
high above Leith Walk
to mute nightly crowds and
stare at the North Sea over red roofs
on rare sunny summer afternoons.
Struggling to hold myself in the now
I shuffled through the city
scoffing at crowds as if I were local
while hiding in cafes writing poems
in the shadow of Edinburgh castle.
How quickly did it take to drink
five pints of chilled Guinness with her
if memory serves a few swigs
days before we found ourselves
dancing at the bottom of Arthur’s Seat.
Feet kicked to the blare
of bagpipes slicing August air
emptied cans of Old Speckled Hen
crushed around edges of the floor
aluminum lingering on lips.
Until soles pointed toward the ceiling,
stairs became too cumbersome
to climb and bring night to an end,
how long did we lay on worn carpet
eyes shut to amber walls closing in.
She said everything to make the future continuous
but there were returns planned for tomorrows
I guarded myself accordingly
but for the moment
I was there.
Copyright © Daniel Bliss
Daniel is a world-traveling poet originally from Anchorage, Alaska. Currently, he is based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan as part of the writing MFA program at the University of Saskatchewan. His poems often focus on relationship to the long list of places he’s lived. His poems have been published or are forthcoming in Beyond Words, Blood and Bourbon, Cerasus Magazine, Down in the Dirt, and many others.
Fresh Voices is a publication and workshop program created by and for the League’s associate members.
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