Skip to main content

My bag of keys, and other baggage


I enjoyed re-encountering this poem which I wrote quite a long time ago – it feels appropriate, with its retrospective feelings, mingled with vague thoughts about the future, at this time of year.

It’s quite simple, telling the story of an experience, but I hope it adds up to more just description.  Keys are evocative, each with their personal story, like individuals in their own right.
At the same time though, they can be grouped into sets, well families almost…

But this is to tell the poem in prose, which undermines the whole point of writing the poem in the first place, so I’ll stop now, and give you the poem.

Though I did also want to say that sometime after I’d written it, I came across another poem about keys.  I thought that was a very good poem; it started in a similar vein, but moved on into a very different area – you may well know it? It made me feel uncomfortable, because I thought other people might think I’d got the idea from her.  But keys – heavy of course with potential symbolism – are a frequent item in all of our lives, so really it shouldn’t be surprising if more than one poet would have the idea to write about them.

More specifically, I know the discomfort was related to the unpleasant experience I had when I was organising a poetry competition and a significant episode of (in the event, clumsy) plagiarism was later discovered in a winning poem.  I felt foolish, somehow responsible, out of my depth and completely unsure what to do.  It did all work out in the end, but not without a lot of blood – several were wounded – on the carpet.  And left me at least with a continuing vague embarrassment, a feeling of having been near something contaminating and a greatly increased fear of ever being thought to be unoriginal, let alone a plagiarist.

Which actually is rather silly, since we all borrow (if not steal) at times, draw inspiration from others’ work and must surely be allowed to imitate.

Well, the perpetrator had a good line in excusing himself, and he found a certain degree of support along the lines suggested above.

Much water’s flowed under the bridge since then.  Sorry about the mixed metaphors – it’s just that a lot of all this is about time passing, the locks which so many of these keys fitted having long since disappeared, and dust has gathered.

Yes, it was all a long time ago now, and all of us – be we plagiarists or self-styled originals, borrowers or lenders, creators or literary detectives – have moved on too, and are different.

My bag of keys has got heavier, gathering more since then, but I still find myself occasionally tipping them out and…
Definitely time for the poem.





My Bag of Keys

The keys cascade out on my desk –
I stir them like a miser taking
pleasure in their metal smells.

Before me many promises –
Silver Chest, Small Blue Suitcase,
Old Green Box – on crumpled labels.

Some I know – the bent Land Rover
key called Wilmot Breeden Union
Made in England FP638

and Granny's Back Door Key
“the old one, now no good”
kept just in case, like all the others

from forgotten padlocks, long stopped
clocks, wind-up toys, the Mountain Gate,
AA Box and chests of drawers.

Here are handmade heavy keys
long shafted, flanged, heraldic
with no need for numbers;

others, proudly engineered declare
their name and number – Belfry Brand
Yale and Towne, or Empire Made;

but some are simply stamped out
from a thin sheet – small change,
cheap little Cheyney, Pifco, Plumbob

names spilt in dust from many places,
gathered over years.  And now I add
my own odd keys to the collection

hoping one day something new
may be unlocked, or at least a child
or grandchild may tip them out

as I do now to smell their currency,
assemble sets in little families
and keep them safe, then pass them on.

Comments

  1. This is a glorious evocation of the keys. Who among us doesn't put keys somewhere when what they locked is no longer in use? The sense of smell that the keys have created , the tactile feeling of their weight, the way they've been crafted is a delight...and the ones pressed out of cheap thin tin...the symmetrical Cheyneys which could be replaced by a probing Helix compass point.

    We have jars of old currency too...thin aluminium coins, heavy edwardian pennies, west african shillings with a hole in so they can be threaded and worn.

    I loved this poem, and most of all, Grannie's old back door key. It doesn't matter which Grannie...I can hold it even now in the hand of my imagination and suddenly hear the scrape of the bottom of the door where a stone became lodged years before and now would scratch and trace an arcing groove as long as the door remained next to the deep stone sink of the flower room.

    The poem works so well. Thanks for it, and this blog.

    SMW

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Reread the poem just now...and of course more jewels emerge...stirring the keys like a miser gave me Fagin fingering through his box of stolen treasure..."all my pretty things, Oliver"
      And again, the register of names, there was a time when I visualised Willenhall as having no other business activity than lock making and was almost tempted to go there and see for myself.

      Chubb- now there's a solid name. For a solid strong box.
      No one's going to break into that one...not a whiff of flimsiness. Your things are quite literally in a safe place.

      SMW

      Delete
    2. Thank you for those lovely comments, which are so encouraging - you've really understood what I was trying to say - indeed, taken it further...
      I hadn't thought about the coins - yes, I've got several old Gold Block pipe tobacco tins of my father in law's, just as you describe!
      I really hope I may have the benefit of your deep reading for further poems on this blog.
      Thank you!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Three Hares

  The Three Hares We continue on our way running, running, running around held together tip to tip so I can hear what she can hear as well as her. And the other follows me in front of her – we are joined up by our ears so we follow, lead and follow running, running, running around we continue on our way. Running, running, running around – no cause for worry – what's to come has already been. The future's past – watch us here – we're going nowhere – the last is first and first is last. Our present moment sees us still although we seem to race – running, running, running around we continue. On our way running, running, running around hearing your persistent questions – why do you keep on asking? We cannot tell you any more. May you share your senses and find soft silence at your centre which is so close, while you go on running, running, running around. The turning of the year, with the various thoughts about the past and the future that c

Aftermath

I love the word Aftermath, with its apparent Anglo-Saxon simplicity. I read that it means after the mowing, perhaps a second or later mowing; more specifically, it can refer to the crop of grass which springs up after the mowing earlier in the summer. Even if the quality of the grass be criticised as not having the fragrance or sweetness of the first crop, or worse, dismissed as 'the bloomless aftermath', it is after all new growth – a reminder of what has been, and of what is yet to come. Aftermath Yes, the grass will grow again. There will be another season here upon these same old fields where sheep shall safely graze again as if it were the first occasion.   Fresh growth of flimsy blades will spring to feed a new-born generation here once more, in time, expected along with others, all those others drawn forth to prosper in the sun.   And some who left will come again remembering this place. A pair of swallows from the past will score the sky above the

Happy Christmas!

Christmas – or if you prefer, Solstice, Hanukkah, or just This Special Time… Stop now.  For a moment, wait. And look.  From here you can see far. In this direction, where we’ve been – the climb, the ups and downs. Now turn around. There before you lies the future.  At the summit of the year there’s time to rest, and be refreshed – let’s gather here, so we may share each other’s company, look forward to the new arrivals, lives to come travelling into this misty landscape, and in our brightness bring to mind those no longer in our group. So drop your rucksack, get your breath back the old year lies behind – for now let’s all enjoy the present gift-wrapped here before us. I’m quite sure this little poem has no great literary, let alone poetic merit, but hey we don’t always have to be polished, clever, neat or profound. Or original. Or elegant. Especially not when you’ve just got to the top of a mountain. But there is a def