Doors — Who Knows

You never know

what lies behind a door.


That’s the point.


A door may conceal

what was never

meant to be seen.



The odds and ends,

the remnants, 

of some magnum opus.


The mundane residue

of what once

was grand.



An open door may suddenly

reveal three levels of 

brick arches,


piggyback one on the other, 

framing hidden loggias,

backdrops to an unexpected courtyard. 


Those hidden gardens,

alive in spring

with bird calls,


are meant only 

for the eyes

of an entitled few.


Some harbour wisteria.


Nature run rampant

within the walls.  


There are treasures

and castoffs

behind those doors. 


A garage

can be the entrance 

to a warren of rooms. 


The underpinnings

of the city

that was and is.


Thoughts go to

Piranesi and Roman ruins

or to his phantasmagorical prisons.


To Frank Stockton’s question

of behind which door one finds the lady,

or where the tiger lurks.


Every five steps

there’s another door

waiting to be opened.


Empty chairs, a miniature altar,

mutely awaiting worshippers,

promising food for the soul.


Two doors down

well-worn wooden treads

lead to an offering of pasta Carbonara.


You never know what lies hidden, silent and unseen,

behind one door and then another, 

waiting to be opened.


Or perhaps closing,

on the past, or on the future, 

recent or remote.


5 thoughts on “Doors — Who Knows

  1. Erika

    I love the way you’ve woven the photos into the poem. You’ve captured the personality of Orvieto’s always intriguing doors, something I’ve always found to stir the imagination… 

    <

    div>❤️

    Sent from my iPhone

    <

    div dir=”ltr”>

    <

    blockquote type=”cite”>

    Like

  2. What a glut of images and memories to stir the minds of LIKE MINDED FRIENDS especially of those privileged to have walked and seen the images with you. Csaba.

    Like

Leave a reply to Anonymous Cancel reply