Published in Overland Issue 129 — 1992 · Poetry The Museum of Wishes John Jenkins In the Museum of Wishes, legend says, are thingsthat never were, every forgotten thing:secrets left untold, love unspoken,wishes too elusive to be real.In the Museum of Wishes, are plansnever carried out, such is their beauty.They rest in ghostly galleries,in vast halls of wondering.Exhibits, surrounded by silence,galaxies without a single star.There’s a map of the Museum of Wishesdrawn as a footnote to some drab town,a dusty exhibit in the history of dreams.It gets further away as you drive there;people shrug, scratch their headsand offer to help, gesturing vaguely towards the horizon:“There must be some mistake,” they say.“Certainly, there’s no museum here.”In the Museum of wishes you maytouch things best forgotten,unloved, unsaid, not there, in aisles and galleries as endlessas speculation. People say,if there was no Museum of Wishes, thoughtscouldn’t stray on Earth. Untranslatedinto life, they accumulate perversely,forever refusing to be.Reading signs in sighs or clouds,walking backwards, looking where there isclearly no museum,you might find it, paradoxically. Enter cruel longingat the edge of sleep,find a child’s abandoned toy. Stumble,just by chance, into the Museum of Wishes.When you return, there’s barely a memory:a wisp of nothing, useless as a tear.Perhaps you cough, and change the subject:“Yes the weather has been mild.You drive towards the Museum of Wishes,an image in your rear-view mirror, brightlike a star. Then something distracts:the sound of breathing, or profilesof clouds persuade false turns.You leave the road, and speed away.“There it is!” and someone tugs your sleeve,some day you were almost absent to yourself.“There! Beyond the lake”, pointing where anold bus shelteris scribbled by the rain. “There!” into shadowsand broken glass in a wrecker’s yard.“There!”, then drops your sleeve and says,“Why did you bring me here?”At last, you stop and stretch, or yawn,surveying yet another vacant lot.You wander down a ruined subway, lingeron a bridge above a dreaming town. Youlook down at rubble, at some anonymous city,stroke your tired smile, adjust your frown.You have arrived, and stand silent at laston a patch of withered grass. John Jenkins More by John Jenkins › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 8 November 20248 November 2024 · Poetry Announcing the final results of the 2024 Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers Editorial Team After careful consideration, judges Karen Wyld and Eugenia Flynn have selected first place and two runners-up to form the final results of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize! 6 November 20246 November 2024 · Poetry TV Times Kate Lilley I try out for Can Can after school / knowing I’m not cut out for the high kicks / Ballads chansons show tunes ok / I can belt out Judy Garland and all the songs from Oliver / “Who Will Buy”/”As Long as He Needs Me” / Wher-e-e-e-ere is love