Grandmother's garden held treasures
Her garden was delightful.
Pansies lined the rose bed
dahlias leaned one side of the fence
and six foot sun flowers
the other. Down
the back was an old tree,
branches dead underneath.
I used to sit in there, in
my imaginary house
where the sun streamed
in and lit the words
on the pages of my books
until they flared to life
transporting me to islands,
caves and castles. I was
a damsel desiring her knight,
a queen captured by a pirate
but most of all, I was somebody
in a world that had forgotten
I was me.
Monday, July 31, 2006
Seven days a week
Dad would sit for hours
on the grey Massey Fergusson
tractor, harrowing the soil
turning sods and re-turning
them until they bent,
crumbled like gold dust.
The land chose when to give
back to him, to repay
him for the year's nurturing
harrow and manure, hoeing
weeds, unchoking plants.
He'd work the ground
until the ground worked him,
gave to him
in a hand to mouth
existence where sometimes
the hand was empty.
He worked as blisters burst,
from sun up to beyond
sun down. In those days
we were richer
than the soil.
Dad would sit for hours
on the grey Massey Fergusson
tractor, harrowing the soil
turning sods and re-turning
them until they bent,
crumbled like gold dust.
The land chose when to give
back to him, to repay
him for the year's nurturing
harrow and manure, hoeing
weeds, unchoking plants.
He'd work the ground
until the ground worked him,
gave to him
in a hand to mouth
existence where sometimes
the hand was empty.
He worked as blisters burst,
from sun up to beyond
sun down. In those days
we were richer
than the soil.
Thursday, July 27, 2006
All that matters is here
The door is open
I know where it leads
but hold back from walking through,
taking that step out
into a world that gleams
beyond the windows, green
grass and red roses
and laughter.
I don't want to leave today.
Yesterday I might have
in a fit, in a fit
of pique or pain
or downright rage,
the kind that makes me scratch
my nails on plastered walls
or slam doors so cracks appear
in the woodwork. Today
I want to wallow
to wade and not swallow
the self pity that's wrapped
itself about my body, to bathe
and burst hot bubbles
and sup champagne
or cognac
and smoke fat cigars
and watch the cat
sleep.
The door is open
I know where it leads
but hold back from walking through,
taking that step out
into a world that gleams
beyond the windows, green
grass and red roses
and laughter.
I don't want to leave today.
Yesterday I might have
in a fit, in a fit
of pique or pain
or downright rage,
the kind that makes me scratch
my nails on plastered walls
or slam doors so cracks appear
in the woodwork. Today
I want to wallow
to wade and not swallow
the self pity that's wrapped
itself about my body, to bathe
and burst hot bubbles
and sup champagne
or cognac
and smoke fat cigars
and watch the cat
sleep.
Monday, July 24, 2006
Sometimes
Sometimes,
when the rain lands just so
on the window pane, I think
of you. The world outside
blurs and I remember when
you brought clarity, when
you brought butterflies
and showed me snail trails,
carrying innocence on your fingertips
between the grains of dirt
that you'd dug up to show
me where worms lived,
and you gifted me
with stars
that had fallen from the sky
and gathered in your eyes. Now
you've moved on, gone
to ground in a place
beyond my arms where
I can never follow.
Yet on winter days
the memories will still surface
in raindrops that pool
below the pane.
Sometimes,
when the rain lands just so
on the window pane, I think
of you. The world outside
blurs and I remember when
you brought clarity, when
you brought butterflies
and showed me snail trails,
carrying innocence on your fingertips
between the grains of dirt
that you'd dug up to show
me where worms lived,
and you gifted me
with stars
that had fallen from the sky
and gathered in your eyes. Now
you've moved on, gone
to ground in a place
beyond my arms where
I can never follow.
Yet on winter days
the memories will still surface
in raindrops that pool
below the pane.
Sunday, July 23, 2006
He does listen
There are moments in the day
when thoughts whizz
through my mind, thoughts
that begin with the lightest touch
as an eye rests on a butterfly wing,
the monarch's ball gown shimmering
as it dances through my garden.
From there I feel, touched
by the breath of a bumble bee
and dazed by the upturned face
of a dandelion that squirms
when ants wander her nooks
and crannies to sup summer
from her petals. There were times
when I felt alone and was blind
to the simple delights
at my feet. I learned to believe
and asked for my eyes to be opened.
Now, I can see.
There are moments in the day
when thoughts whizz
through my mind, thoughts
that begin with the lightest touch
as an eye rests on a butterfly wing,
the monarch's ball gown shimmering
as it dances through my garden.
From there I feel, touched
by the breath of a bumble bee
and dazed by the upturned face
of a dandelion that squirms
when ants wander her nooks
and crannies to sup summer
from her petals. There were times
when I felt alone and was blind
to the simple delights
at my feet. I learned to believe
and asked for my eyes to be opened.
Now, I can see.
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Sometimes the dark is nothing
They wander along the beach, search
the horizon for ships
or bottles, clear
messages of need carried by
a powerless sea that licks footprints
from the sand under the sun's
copper-beaten glow. I remember
the salt claiming skin, the tightening
of dreams until all that was left
was the breeze in the dark.
They wander along the beach, search
the horizon for ships
or bottles, clear
messages of need carried by
a powerless sea that licks footprints
from the sand under the sun's
copper-beaten glow. I remember
the salt claiming skin, the tightening
of dreams until all that was left
was the breeze in the dark.
Some things will be remembered forever
I wanted to return to that place,
that cottage at the end
of the steep, twisted driveway
where Nana taught me
how to bake pies,
blackcurrant pies
we would eat
with ice cream
and Rodd silver spoons
that now sit in their box,
tarnished.
But now there's motorway
snaking through the countryside
and the white cottage exists
only in my memory.
I wanted to return to that place,
that cottage at the end
of the steep, twisted driveway
where Nana taught me
how to bake pies,
blackcurrant pies
we would eat
with ice cream
and Rodd silver spoons
that now sit in their box,
tarnished.
But now there's motorway
snaking through the countryside
and the white cottage exists
only in my memory.
Thursday, July 13, 2006
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
She made warm winter blankets
There are blackbirds singing.
They don't realise she's gone.
They won't miss her chatter, or
how she sang when her fingers
sewed, quilting pieces, making
layers out of the material
passed on
from tiny shirts, or dancing
skirts and stitched in time, much
as they darn their nests tight
against winter.
There are blackbirds singing.
They don't realise she's gone.
They won't miss her chatter, or
how she sang when her fingers
sewed, quilting pieces, making
layers out of the material
passed on
from tiny shirts, or dancing
skirts and stitched in time, much
as they darn their nests tight
against winter.