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)

19.3.26

Looking Back

 I see me small, on a vast lawn – a smooth green lawn surrounded by bushes, some of them berry bushes, others flowers. There are two huge weeping willows further down the yard, one on either side of the vegetable garden past the end of the lawn, beyond the wooden trellis summer-house.

I am all alone. The two-storey back of the house looms large and flat. My mother, upstairs, sometimes looks out the distant kitchen window to check on me. Her face is tiny, far away and pale, ghost-like.


Yet I don’t feel lonely. All around me the garden throbs with life. Insects are drawn to the flowers, small birds to the berries. The willow leaves, on their long dangling fronds that sweep the ground, rustle and toss, lightly and gently, in intermittent breeze.


I talk in my mind to clouds, to birds, to insects, to berries … to the rising trunks and curtaining fronds of both the soft green willows. I talk to the listeners under the ground and the watchers behind the sky.


When they reply, it is not as if to a small child. They answer all my questions, calmly. I feel rather than hear their answers. I feel, too, their assurance of my understanding.


My young mother, enclosed in the house, does, I think (I think in hindsight) feel fearfully alone … lonely …





Written for Poets and Storytellers United, Friday Writings #219.




13.3.26

The World Is Burning, But ...

 

The world is burning, but

in a day or two the fires will be out.

They’re being water-bombed right now.


The houses and paddocks 

and the poor, trapped stock

will all be destroyed. But the fire


will be out. Only the blackened earth

will map its dimensions 

for a while. 


Some will leave and some

will stay to rebuild. The same 

as they do when it’s water wrecking


home, livelihood, landscape – when 

the big floods thunder, battering our walls, 

drowning whole towns, obliterating the land.


Turn up the aircon, these days

when Summers get longer, hotter.

They’ll figure out something before …


The world is burning, but

it’s over there in Europe, it’s

over there in the Middle East. Not here.


Turn off the news! Don’t watch!

All that maiming and starving, I know

you can’t bear, and the cities of bombed rubble.


It’s over there, it’s all over there.

It’s all over, there … The world is burning, but

go to sleep; there is nothing you can do. 



Written for Poets and Storytellers United at Friday Writings #218.



10.3.26

Bird, in This World

 

Bird, in this world, this

world of today, becomes

a symbol of escape – 

if only we could


take flight, soaring

into high air, away 

from war, starvation,

terrorist attacks and


homelessness …

our green home no longer

safe. If the economy

don’t get you, 


climate




Written for Quadrille #243: Bird is the Word, at dVerse.


(Quadrille: exactly 44 words excluding title, and including a given word, in this instance 'bird'.)