There are no great first lines
There are no great first lines
Not until after the third drink
When the floor is littered with paper
Crumpled in disgust
Thrown wildly
Underarm
Overarm
Blindly
Lobbed
Tossed
Hoisted
Flung
Toward the basket
In the corner
Full to overflowing
With half finished sentences
Exclamation marks
With an air of accusation
Perfectly formed
Line after line unto
The end of each page
After that third drink
A first line
Can be as far as he gets
Afraid to go further
Afraid to lose the rhythm
He pauses
Sitting for hours
Frozen in mid-flow
Sometimes a word will escape
It can feel
As smooth as a fifteen year old scotch
He has plenty of experience
In savouring flavour
Tasting every letter
Licking his lips
As they swirl onto the page
Spitting out the bones
Of a story
Firing them
(Silver bullets kill monsters)
Watching them fall
To see how they land
At first he was excited
Exalted
By how they sounded
All together
In progression
(in the beginning was the word)
Then he grew fearful
Of losing the gist
In the shake-up
Nothing is ever easy
Even when he thought it might be
There was a cost
He thought
He was willing to pay
But lately
He has been running on empty
There comes a time
When even the whisky
Runs out
And when the well is dry
He can’t find the words
To grasp
The significance
Of his thirst.