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)
Showing posts with label David. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David. Show all posts

4.10.24

For David, On His Birthday


How is it that you are 57?

I remember your birth:

panting for breath on the hospital bed,

the nurses chiding me for swearing 

at pain like nothing I’d known.

Then, at the end, I thought

I’d split in half from sternum to crotch.

I didn’t care, so long as you got born.

I wanted you in the world!


After you were born, groggy

in my unaccustomed arms, 

you were very gentle

for one who had caused so much pain

struggling to break free into the world. 

You slept on my breast. 

I was afraid I might drop you, 

and handed you back to the nurses.


When I took you home,

I saw you push your tiny arms

out of the blanket I’d been told

to swaddle you in, and wave them

softly in the air, gazing up at them

in wonder – I recognised 

the little, fluttery movements I’d felt 

when I was carrying you in my womb.


As an infant you were full of

delight in the world, and you

loved me dearly, crooning to yourself

as you toddled round the house,

'Mummy, Mummy, Mummy,

I love you. You my good girl.'


As a schoolboy, you revealed a dry wit.

Something in you was always wise 

and knowledgeable – your father and I

both used to ask your advice 

as if you were an adult, and you gave it

thoughtfully and well.


We like to have deep, revealing talks,

you and I, when we get together –

not all the time, but at least

once per visit. As a man,

you have weathered problems and sorrows 

without losing your fairness of mind

and your loving nature.


You look after me now, in what ways you can.

All in all, you have been and are

one of my greatest blessings.

I still want you in the world.



An exercise in Natalie Goldberg's book, The True Secret of Writing, asks one to list occasions one might write a poem for, then write it in the style of Wang Wei, a Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty – i.e. truthfully and in 'unfancy' language.


13.7.23

Losing It

Some losses are worse than others.

My Scorpio earring disappears, absent

from my reflection in the bathroom mirror.

Before I turned it into an earring, I wore it 

as a pendant. Maybe that was safer.


My son David found it when he was nine

on the dirt bottom of the deep pool 

at Howard Springs in the Territory, 

surfaced and handed it straight to me.

It might have been there hours or years.


The copperplate inscription on the back said, 

‘To Roy, with love from Les. (No information.)’

Eventually I had it smoothed off, leaving

the back of the disc plain. On the front,

the Scorpion is raised, bas-relief, in silver.


This earring brought me a dear friend

when I stood next to her in the checkout line

at Coles twelve years ago, and she –

a stranger then – said, ’I’m a Scorpio too!’

‘Only thing to be,’ I replied, and we began.


I hate it being lost. I feel it’s my magic earring.

(I wear it with a silver pentacle in the other ear.)

It’s somewhere the house; I haven’t been out.

Oh, wait. To the letter-box. It’s dark now, I’ll check 

tomorrow. I ask the angels: ‘Help me find it soon!’















Next morning: I did once find a 'lost' earring on the ground by the letter-box. Not this time.

Next afternoon: Whew! It turned up! In a place I would have thought so impossible that I now believe the fairies were playing a game with me. Not the first time, over the years, that missing objects have emerged later in absolutely impossible locations. This time, a friend said 'a little spell' for me — and I know she is one who is favoured by the fairies because of her gardening and love for Nature.