When I say table, it's actually a two-tier shoe rack, but it serves the purpose of a bedside table perfectly well.
I know some people have cabinets by their beds, with drawers for personal effects; others have night-stands; and I'm supposing some have nothing at all, but they are probably the sort of people who have a television screen mounted up on the bedroom wall and a remote control under the pillow.
When it is there, what purpose does the bedside cabinet,/night-stand/table serve in this age of fully plumbed bathrooms? I suppose at minimum it's a repository for those items one takes off or puts down last thing at night without wanting to have to get out of bed - a book perhaps, spectacles or contact lenses (if worn), mobile phone. (My parents used to keep their false teeth in mugs on their bedside cabinets. Ugh.) It might also sport a bedside lamp, box of tissues, glass of water, alarm clock.
Then I did a quick web search for information about other items frequently found on a bedside table or in a bedside cabinet (yes, I guess I'm stretching the brief here slightly). Cosmetics featured quite highly - cold cream, face wipes, eau de cologne, lipstick; so did medications - contraceptive pills, various sorts of tablets, epi-pen, inhaler; also items of a recreational nature - condoms, vibrators, hand-cuffs et cetera. There were some oddities (I won't say surprises, because very little does anymore) and I'll just list a few that it would never have occurred to me to keep by my bedside (even in a drawer) - house keys, pet rock, chocolate, packets of sweets, passport, credit cards, crucifix, torch, cigarettes plus lighter/matches (I'm not a smoker, but wouldn't in bed even if I were), roll of banknotes, penny whistle, thermometer, knife and fork, scalpel, pepper spray, loaded pistol!
It's been a really busy Saturday, with poetry events morning, afternoon and evening, so I've had no time to work on a poem even remotely connected to the theme. Instead, let me share one from the American poet Anna Blake.
on my bedside table
for seven days
it settled in the very place
that your hands had aimlessly
chosen
staining a ring around a mostly empty bodice.
mostly empty?
barely full?
you see, for me,
the wine glass was
my way of having you
stay as long as I wanted.
I saw your delicate
fingerprints stamped upon
the stem and body
just as they were on mine, under a tin roof
amidst a blanket of summer rain.
On my own bedside table, as shown in close-up below, I have an anglepoise lamp, some books, a statue of buddha, a jar containing scent-diffuser sticks, a framed photograph and an ornate model of a cave beetle. Only the books vary from time to time. Right now they are 'In And Out Of The Mind' by Ruth Padel, 'Honour' by Elif Shafak and 'Stone & Sky', the latest from Ben Aaronovitch.
It's been a really busy Saturday, with poetry events morning, afternoon and evening, so I've had no time to work on a poem even remotely connected to the theme. Instead, let me share one from the American poet Anna Blake.
Love Drunk
I left your wine glasson my bedside table
for seven days
it settled in the very place
that your hands had aimlessly
chosen
staining a ring around a mostly empty bodice.
mostly empty?
barely full?
you see, for me,
the wine glass was
my way of having you
stay as long as I wanted.
I saw your delicate
fingerprints stamped upon
the stem and body
just as they were on mine, under a tin roof
amidst a blanket of summer rain.
Anna Blake
Oh, and by the way, the Dead Good Blog passed the 3,000,000 views milestone today. How about that. I just wish more people would leave comments (and I know my fellow bloggers feel the same way)
.
Thanks, as ever, for reading this, S ;-)
Thanks, as ever, for reading this, S ;-)
4 comments:
Another fine piece to mull over. You listed many of the items in my bedside cabinet. But most of all, I am still thinking about the words "personal effects". We use it all the time, and we all know what it means, but when and how did "personal" and "effects" come to be put together? May make the basis for another of your musings?
Not your average bedroom, though we shouldn't be surprised. I'd not encountered Anna Blake before, that's a good poem.
What a lovely looking bedroom. My bedside table has a lamp and a book (currently the controversial Salt Path memoir). Cosmetics and medicines live in the bathroom cabinet. If I had a pistol, that would be under my pillow.
That's quite a few pairs of shoes, to be fair.
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