We who with songs beguile your pilgrimage / And swear that Beauty lives though lilies die, / We Poets of the proud old lineage / Who sing to find your hearts, we know not why ... (James Elroy Flecker)

17.1.25

Low Battery

 

My battery is failing gradually: not 

all at once with a sudden, silent stop

but blinkingly, haltingly, bit by bit …

interrupting itself with sudden (brief)

upsurges of vigour, effervescence, life.


Life is a long journey of body and mind

if we’re lucky and don’t lose it early –

though some might think that fortunate,

whose lives are painful, restricted, sad.

Mine’s been long, and mostly good.


But where in the body is the battery? 

Which organ houses my get-up-and-go, 

my being on? What is my source 

of vital energy? Can’t be the brain: 

that’s not failing, not seriously yet. 


But the body limps, hunches, hesitates,

has become reluctant to move forward

into all its many responsibilities

(except the ones involving sitting,

such as writing this, or any poem).


I rule out the heart. Also the intricate

digestive bits. The doctors have got them 

well controlled with medications, all

functioning as well or better than before –

except for the gall bladder: disabled.


Oh, and the tonsils, long gone. Otherwise 

I’m intact. Er, well, that word suggests

the sexual. I’m not of course intact

in that way, not since my twenties. So now

at 85, I can answer a famous question.


When does desire stop? Truthfully,

my answer is the same as that legendary

French countess (whose name 

I forget!) who said, ‘You must ask

someone else. I am only 72.’


But at 85 I can tell you: though desire 

is not gone exactly, it has reduced. 

It has slowed, eased off, become less

urgent, intractable, fierce … just like 

my whole physicality… Ah, so that’s it!




Written for Friday Writings 150: Low Battery at Poets and Storytellers United.



9.1.25

Loss / Possession

 

I recall him:

handsome, saturnine aristocrat,

humourless brother of 

The Laughing Cavalier


on my mother's

wall ... fancy hat 

with swirling brim,

deep green coat.


Long lost now –

after she died,

all her property

dispersed or abandoned.


I remember too,

later, a card:

the Green Woman

wrinkled and wise.


A student begged 

to borrow, copy. 

I was reluctant; 

she promised return.


She never did. 

She moved  away, 

leaving no address…

Remembering, I see 


again, or still, 

that image of 

nut-brown, smiling face

kindly, knowing eyes. 


These decades later,

their clear features

revive: never truly

lost or stolen.





For Friday Writings #159: Making It Newat Poets and Storytellers United: a remix (or perhaps more of a revision) of an earlier version also written for P&SU. This one began as an erasure, then I rearranged it slightly in places for more coherence, and altered some words. It settled into three-word lines and four-line verses.

Not that I was unhappy with the original; this was just done for the purpose of the exercise. I actually like both versions and I'm not sure either is 'better', just different. However, such paring down can sometimes save a piece that isn't working. In poetry, often 'less is more'.



1.1.25

Found Haiku, December 2024

 


many doors have closed

some faerie have withdrawn —

they left with the woods


Found in Enchantment of the Faerie Realm byTed Andrews



tawny tiger —

my cat in the dark

with eyes of light


Found in my own 12-line poem Feline, published in the collaborative collection She Too, CXD, 2014 (also to be found on an earlier blog, if you click the link).



the scuffing 

of schoolboy shoes on gravel

breaking the silence


Article on the town of Mt Pleasant in The Australian Women’s Weekly February 2024.



first day of school —

one child after another

setting off


From the ‘Family Matters’ column by Pat McDermott in The Australian Women’s Weekly February 2024.