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)

9.3.25

And sometimes it rains outside a poem …

 

I want to say, to my friend who shows me

beautiful images of rain, beautiful words

for rain – inside rain poems, inside monsoons …


and I know they are real, those rains,

those pictures in poems; but I am inside 

the shell of my walls, thankful for light


(so many here now have none) as dark falls

outside, where rain has not stopped falling

for days, for long nights, as the rivers rise.


Two nights ago, on this hill, I hunkered down

pulling my walls in around me, waiting 

for cyclonic winds. They never arrived


and I’m thankful. Cyclone Alfred danced

and flirted with the swirling ocean, took 

his time coming to land, looked around


and headed a little further north of here 

than originally planned – a flighty cyclone,

a teenager, randomly changing his mind:


a playful lad, not a fighter. But although

he's not fierce, he's big. Even as, at last,

he calms and slows, the fling of his arms


casts rain clouds east to west, north to south,

day after day after day, night after night after 

night … while the winds hit places nearby,


power lines crash and tangle, trees are uprooted 

or lose their branches, as everywhere the rain

falls and falls, and all the rivers continue to rise.



Written in response to Rajani Radhakrishnan's 'Rain after rain after rain' post on Substack.






Surviving Cyclone Alfred

 

‘Glad your ordeal’s over,’ 

they tell me, full of concern

for both me and my little cat. 

Some add, ‘You never needed

to suffer so much stress.’


How to explain? For me

it was necessary (even though,

I now know, much of it wasn’t)

and an adventure (even though here

nothing spectacular happened).


Poppi was extremely comfortable 

on piled blankets, enjoyed her supper, 

and is always happy near me. She did

protest the disruption – on principle – 

loudly, once, then settled and slept.


I’d set up the bathroom early. (‘Choose

your smallest room,’ officialdom said.) 

I’m old and slow, Poppi’s old and deaf.

I knew I couldn’t wait for some moment

of certainty, urgency, then start to move.


The night before, I was very scared.

It was the unknown, the waiting.

I got up, made camomile tea,

read Tarot and I Ching, glugged 

Rescue Remedy, went back to sleep.


I always need something to do.

On the night itself, there were things 

to do. I couldn’t read, instead kept watch 

on Alfred’s slow, erratic progress. ‘Keep 

the updates coming,’ family begged.


The comfortable chair soon wasn’t.

Sitting up all night in one position

was a strain on these elderly legs. 

I hauled out the shower chair, added 

a cushioning blanket, propped my feet.


By morning – with news of downgrading

to a mere ‘tropical low’ – I went to my bed.

Poppi checked the view from the windows,

then came, as usual, to supervise me. I 

disappeared into the soundest, safest sleep.


I’m too high for flooding. I have supplies.

No tree crashed on my roof. My windows 

didn’t crack. I haven’t lost power yet. 

Others are not so blessed. Alfred wasn’t

the strongest, but his reach was wide.


I hear right now an ambulance – or is it  

a fire truck? – sirening past, just down the hill.

(The firies do water rescues too.) I almost

wish I was Catholic, so I could cross myself.

Instead I send light. As I do to the whole area.


In hindsight, I see, much that I did 

was unnecessary, some of it foolish. 

But I’m proud I achieved things 

I never imagined I could, physically

and mentally – yes, ‘at my age’!


Before the event, my niece-who-is-like-

a-daughter phoned to say, ‘What an 

adventure!’ (In drought country, she envies us 

all this rain. Everything’s relative.) Only  

a small adventure, I tell myself. But yes!  
















7.3.25

Parting of the Ways

 

She went academic; I went all witchy and stuff.

But we’d always shared everything. There was

that serious glitch when my husband (who was

having an unrecognised breakdown at the time)

did some shoddy carpentry for her and her husband –

but both the husbands became exes soon after that.

Then she and I reconnected. She told me all about

her new love (a wild Irish singer) and her new career. 

I told her all about mine. Something in her voice

went slightly cold, a little strained, like taking a back-step. 

Was it ‘Reiki Master’ or ‘Tarot reader’ which frightened her, 

or the tale of awakening to magic? Maybe it was my journey 

through awareness of reincarnation, all the gradual clues.


Or was it her new status? In my time as a mere undergrad,

the halls of academe had seemed to be about freedom, 

adventures of thought, a nonconformist’s delight. On staff,

as I’ve gradually learned from friends, it’s now more often

about playing acceptable games, hierarchy, and saying

the approved lines. I guess you can study witchcraft,

but not from the position of believing magic is real.

(Though you’d think the Irish lover might have been cool

with all that.) Would I have compromised her standing? 

Her advancement? Did I turn into an undesirable friend? Or 

did she truly despise whom I’d become? (She would have been 

fascinated, once.) The off-putting was always carefully polite.

One day I decided (as intended?) I just can’t be bothered any more.



Sharing this with Friday Writings #167 at Poets and Storytellers United.