A Dream
Ken Ireland I don’t know if it’s possible but I’ll continue to dream it, juggling the fine points when I have to to lend it a kind of reality. Some kinds of hope are just virtuous dreaming. I’m just dreaming back to last night, glimpsing at men walking down the sidewalk, wondering what they dream of. The carpenter hadn’t hammered the last nail— I heard his banging for the first time in many years when I thought he too had vanished. What was it that disappeared before I noticed something missing? Was that a dream? How could I have missed it? Are we forced to carve a purpose out of nothing? Did we dream it like a vision, or did it dream us? (This is, I guess, a technical question, and no one can be expected to provide more than a best guess.) I juggle the timing of the wash cycle so that I can try to keep a date with my dreams. My future doesn’t seem to be pretending to be something, someone—not me. I didn’t patch it together with tinsel, latex, fabric, and strut on the stage when heels ...