A place where I'll post up some thoughts and ideas - especially on literature in education, children's literature in general, poetry, reading, writing, teaching and thoughts on current affairs.
Tuesday, 4 November 2014
New Poem: Dentist
I had to go to the dentist a few weeks ago. It was
for a crown. The dentist explained to me that it’s
like a false tooth that sits on the wreck of your own
tooth. Fine by me. I went in one day for the ‘prep’
and then a fortnight later for the crown. The dentist
said that it would take quite a time. When I’m at the
dentist I shut my eyes and do stretches with my
shoulders and neck. I go into a trance. I hear the
dentist and his assistant as if they are at the other
end of a corridor. I heard, ‘That’s it.’ I got up, said
thanks and walked out. For a few days I didn’t
think to look in my mouth to see the crown. I leaned
into the mirror and could just make out a tiny clock
face. The dentist had fixed it, face up in the tooth, the
tooth being on the bottom row. I rushed back to the
dentist, went up to the receptionist and asked to see
him. The receptionist said that he had left. He wasn’t
working at this dentists any more.
I said, ‘Look! He’s put a tiny clock in there.’
I opened my mouth. She looked in and said, ‘It
says twenty past five. That’s the right time.’