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 Rob Schackne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Schackne. Show all posts

2.1.24

Reluctance

 

It keeps going out of my mind: to light

a candle, with a prayer for the friend

who died yesterday. It doesn’t seem right

that he, younger than me, comes to this end

sooner. I want to forget, to pretend.


But he told me – soon after he knew – so

I can’t remove it from fact, can’t not know

he who was all grace and kindness has gone.

His hand clasped mine in goodbye, then let go.

Now I must bless and farewell, and move on.



Form: dizain






Sharing with Poets and Storytellers United at Friday Writings #108: Beginning. (Where I make the point that beginnings are entwined with endings.)


For the back story on this, if desired – a longish post, please be advised – see here.



Storm and Aftermath

 

The wild thunder rolls,

the wind gusts all over the place.

Texting a sister witch, I raise

protection over our houses and cars

and hope it will be enough. 

It’s worked countless times before,

but I never take it for granted. 

(That’s not the same as not trusting.)


And all the time, in another 

part of my mind, I’m tallying up

the list of my new dead this year – 

as the year draws to an end. Four

old friends. Two sister goddesses

who spread their light and danced

in the circle; two men I met in prison, 

poets, who gave the rest of their lives, 

in freedom, to supporting people in need. 


Love has many faces, many forms. 

I’m living long, so far. It happens

that some people go. I always want

that they stay forever. But they have

their own roads, their own journeys.

Sometimes they know they’ll go

and so we can say our goodbyes. 

Sometimes they visit afterwards,

or in the very moment of death. All

loving messages are gratefully received.


Morning comes. The thunder is over.

Great harm in some places, but not just here

– although it was dramatic, frightening.

Meanwhile, I’m still absorbing the news

another friend messaged, just as the storm 

began. He hadn't suspected. His oncologist

tells him it won’t be long. There are some 

events for which I can’t raise protection.

Yet I’m glad he reached out and told me.


I am so blessed in my friendships! Each

unique and special. This one’s always been

easy and sweet. Younger, I thought he’d be 

left mourning me, some years from now, 

which I’d selfishly have preferred. The poems,

the artworks, enjoyed, are not what I dread

to be without. That’s the quiet understanding,

quietly relied on. My turn now, to give that back.




My old friend (and fellow-poet) Rob messaged me on Christmas Day to tell me he had just been diagnosed with 'very aggressive cancers of lung and liver ... all spreading super fast. Operating is not possible. I am in very good hands. It probably won't be very long, my oncologist says.'

And it wasn't long. I have just learned he died at 8.30 tonight (New Year's Day) and that he was surrounded with love.

We exchanged a few messages on Christmas Day and Boxing Day, while he was still up to it. I told him: 'As a psychic medium I do know beyond any doubt that death is not the end, and hope our souls may connect in friendship again in some future.'  In answer he sent me a smiley face, a pair of praying or 'namaste' hands, a sunflower, and a heart; he told me that, having got the news so very recently, he was busy processing everything. 


'I bet!' I said  (still doing that too, though from a rather better position).

Later I asked him, 'Can you cope with a poem?' and sent this one, which I had just written, telling him it was 'Not terribly morbid, and I'd better say it now while I have the chance.' He replied,  'A delightful poem. Comforting love. Thank you, dearest Rosemary.'A


He said he would reach out when and if he could. I told him, 'If ever there was a time to put your own needs first, this is it!'


He responded with a shiny big red heart emoji. And that was our goodbye. I'm grateful to him that we had one.



Poetic form: nonce (in this case a pattern of lines per verse).



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