Thank you, Blank_Verse and Hawkman for offering comments on this latest number which I had labored over. The form of "Power Outage" was the result of a conscious attempt to mimic (or make a parody of) the kind of poems that used to be published in the Sunday paper. As selected by Ted Kooser, a former U.S. poet laureate, the majority of the reprints seemed to deal with slices of American life, especially (to my observation) middle-class, suburban life.
The poems were all short with short lines, sometimes resembling broken-up lines of prose (though yours fooly did try to inject somewhat less literal elements into this piece.) Although a great many of the Sunday poems were little gems, there was --again, to my way of thinking -- a certain similarity about them, giving the unsettling impression that they could have been composed by the same person.
Certainly there was never, ever anything the least bit offensive "edgy" about any of the them, let alone taking the risk of invoking a litany of the saints in the opening lines, not that the ejaculation here is all that irreverent, but an honest,instantaneous reaction. In line with such non-"family fare" is the "brass ball" metaphor, referring not only to the sun but to the worker who poked the pole. For intestinal fortitude,that guy ranks right up there with Joe Kittinger (Google him.) His nickname must be "B.B." if you catch my drift.
The metaphor introduced in the title was meant to suggest the kind of "power outage" that lasts a lifetime. The third stanza describes the houses ("homes") affected by the blackout-- if "middle-class," then the highest echelon thereof, with imposing football field size lawns fronting each ("meadow-locked.")
Mentioning of the television programs, the microwave, the ceiling light, etc. was a roundabout way (i.e. non-prosaic,non-linear way) of showing that the electricity in the speaker's household stayed on, while the much-better-off neighbors (the "haves") had lost theirs. Despite the temptation to do so, there was no "gloating," but the irony of having the tables turned (for once) was striking.
Now I'm starting to feel sorry for the folks. The incident which was the impetus of this piece occurred on the Sunday following the Fourth of July, a holiday marked by loud fireworks; it happened again last Friday evening, and once more at 4 am (EDT) today. As laypersons we assumed that the explosions and subsequent power outages were caused by a "blown transformer," but we have it on excellent authority (a retiree who did this line of work for several decades) that it wasn't the transformer (though I'm keeping "transform" in my poem.)
Not fifteen feet away from where I sit the power company is preparing to run underground wires as I type this. The vibrations from the excavator are making the screen on my monitor bow in at the middle. But that's not nearly as distressing as it must be for those who have a fancy freezer full of top-of-the-line groceries melting away (though some have back-up generators.)


Reply With Quote
Makes it rather an uneven read though...
