Possum

 

On the news tonight

was a woman who

evaded marriage

by pretending to be dead.

She could have said no,

so this was a clear,

if clearly indirect,

disengagement

and instructive example

for useful deployment.

 

I have at this moment

a very awkward request

lying awkwardly on my desk.

I intend to avoid it

by pretending to be dead.

The office can make contact

to say Mr Hattaway

will not be responding

today or tomorrow

because he seems to be dead.

 

I very much like weddings

but dancing is not my strength.

In future, to avoid dancing,

I’ll pretend to be dead.

 

A neighbour’s dispute

over noise or poor parking?

Pretend to be dead.

It’s Mother’s Day

or some other event

seeking appropriate tokens

of esteem and affection,

which you have forgotten

to procure.

Pretend to be dead.

In a drinking game

but over your head?

If unconscious doesn’t work,

pretend to be dead.

No TV licence?

Pretend to be dead.

In the pub,

trapped in discourse on

the thrombo-erotic

as a semantic signifier

in a proto-causative

post-prose context.

You could pretend

to be well-read

or to be dead.

Grass needs cutting?

Pretend to be dead.

Your turn for the dishes?

Pretend to be dead.

The house work or making the bed?

Pretend to make the bed

– for the rest, pretend to be dead.

Need post-modern irony

to update your rep?

Pretend to be alive.

If the critics don’t buy it,

pretend to pretend

to be dead.

Lent money to friends

who won’t pay, or mention, the lend?

Pretend they are dead.

Afraid of the world

where the world is a threat?

Bury your head in the sand

and leave it there.

Then you won’t have to pretend.

Or repent.

 

Be prepared for extended pretending

and don’t abandon

the insurance or rent

and do what you can

to stay out of debt,

because one way or the other

the pretending, like the lending,

must end.

 

 

 

Ross Hattaway is from New Zealand and lives in Dublin. Seven Towers has published both of his collections, The Gentle Art of Rotting and Pretending to Be Dead