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    Lifescapes

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      The Lurcher had run away

      Lived with us for a week

      Tail tucked in eyes white

      Unable to sleep or speak

      For sheer fright

      An aged Retriever

      Came on holiday -

      Christine would leave her

      When she went to stay

      In France, Goa, Japan,

      On fashionable flights

      To boost her tan

      And see the sights

      I loved old Amber

      Didn’t mind the hair

      On the carpet - fed her

      Walked her everywhere

      Polished her gold coat

      Coaxed vital medicine

      Down her throat

      We couldn’t win

      Old Amber’s gone

      She who was nearly mine

      Left me with one

      Beautiful photograph a line

      Or two in an old diary

      Her Leo birth chart and

      The moment she bit me -

      Angry - on the hand.

      No dog for me

      No dawn exercise

      Haven’t the energy

      Wouldn’t be very wise

      But now just a glance

      At Poppy, Wallis, Betsan,

      And up they dance -

      I give what I can

      Walking the beach

      Poodles, Staffies, Springers

      Strain at the lead to reach

      My burning fingers

      Burdened with love for them

      When did it start?

      Did Kent or Bethlehem

      Break into my heart?

      I am a healer’s wife

      Touching a Dog’s Life

      Forward to Index

      SCRATCHINGS FROM THE BEDPOST ...

      This arrow is not a tattoo -

      It's something that hospitals do

      To prevent any harm

      To the undamaged arm

      And indicate one bone or two.

      Now, piercings were never my thing,

      A bar or a stud or a ring ...

      You can guess how I feel

      With a wrist full of steel,

      The latest in hospital bling!

      When first I was put in a plaster

      I hoped my poor arm would heal faster.

      But this fibreglass shell

      Is hurting like hell,

      A challenge I yet have to master!

      When told that I had a green thumb

      I’d no idea what was to come!

      Now the joint is viridian,

      My elbow obsidian,

      My garden in need of a chum.

      I’m practising being left-handed;

      Its digits must do as commanded,

      Move on from the mouse

      To the whole of the house

      Or else I’ll be utterly stranded!

      I don’t recall saying when stressed,

      ‘I’d give my right arm for a rest!’

      I rarely maintain

      there’s no gain without pain;

      so, zip it! I’m doing my best.

      (broken arm, summer 2014)

      Forward to Index

      MIRROR, MIRROR …

      Mirror, mirror on the wall

      This is a disaster!

      Look at me. I'm getting old

      Dicky knee in plaster,

      Belly-button going south,

      Down on chin and down in mouth.

      Mirror, mirror on the wall

      Once I was a beauty.

      Suddenly I feel the cold,

      Dances are a duty.

      Tired of tramping up the town;

      Longing for my dressing-gown.

      Mirror, mirrror on the wall

      Borrowed time is flying;

      Robbing me of memory,

      All my friends are dying.

      I forgot one funeral;

      Names will not remain at all!

      Mirror, mirror on the wall

      All my bones are crumbling.

      Every nerve is going mad

      And I've started mumbling.

      Lightning flashes in my eyes

      Itchy back and jelly thighs.

      Mirror, mirror on the wall

      Make me stand up straighter!

      I am in no rush at all

      To meet with my Creator!

      I'm fighting back against decline

      I'm backing up my life on-line.

      Mirror, mirror on the wall,

      Don't you go near Facebook!

      Here I choose a digital

      Lavender and lace look.

      Here, I'm who I want to be

      In quasi-immortality.

      Forward to Index

      YOUTH

      TAO

      One wild horse,

      One tame.

      One with plaited hair,

      One with free mane.

      Born of the one Sire,

      Foaled of the one Dam,

      She is the wild one,

      The tame I am.

      One dark horse,

      One pale,

      One trim in ribbon,

      One with flying tail.

      Caught of the same rope,

      Locked in the one stall,

      Her ear flattens -

      Mine pricks to the Call.

      One high horse,

      One low,

      One for gentle duty,

      One for rodeo.

      Fired with the same Blood,

      Breathing the one Breath,

      Twinned in the old shafts,

      Love against Death.

      One dark curve,

      One bright,

      One with a dark eye,

      One with white.

      Poles of the One Love,

      Halves of the One Whole.

      Locked in a single Light,

      Our double Soul.

      Forward to Index

      BEYOND THE PLOUGHLAND

      A cat - asleep? Or dead? - in a bank of grass.

      And a bicycle. Dead?

      To me who think I live these things are dead.

      I pass them,

      The huge present; the infinitesimal past.

      What do they do there?

      Beyond the ploughland lies the blue light.

      I will dig coins for myself as I cross the earth.

      As my clothes fall off me and die like leaves in autumn

      And new grass grows out of the approaching land to clothe me.

      Sometimes I am naked.

      And I can only watch where the blue horizon hangs

      And wait for the wind to finish mating me,

      Then bend with my nickel spoon again to turn the earth.

      For glimpses of what? Hope?

      Splinters of somebody’s past, my future?

      The years turn in their sleep and mutter their dreams

      Out of the sleeping corn,

      And another gold grain sticks in my hand.

      The wind sings

      You are alone and I run around you

      Playing at journeys while you stand and think

      And stoop, and yawn, and think, and frown in the furrows.

      You never look up at me when you rise;

      Your eyes light through me as if - am I there,

      dancing before you toward the horizon? -

      Where the blue light drips.

      The sun curries favour with the wind

      And I work alone

      Planting love, pricking myself,

      And my blood drops somebody’s impulse into the soil.

      One day

      I shall be riding the dark back of the sea

      At the edge of the end of it all -

      The inachievable future the great present.

      And the blue light will smoke over these lifting waves

      To take me into its dream with All the forgotten

      Whose thoughts lie unburied, on the ploughland

      Where the wind stands

      Wondering

      Why we left them there
    >
      Forward to Index

      RED FEATHERS

      When you last let in the morning frost

      To scatter crumbs upon your window-sill,

      Shook the bread-board clear over the garden

      And watched the wild wings beating down for breakfast,

      did you think then? - birds have died for you

      So you can have red feathers on your hat.

      A cock bled all his gallantry for you -

      His love flown to your head.

      Put out more bread.

      Forward to Index

      REFUGEE

      Today I knitted myself a hat

      In red and green, for the holly season -

      And pulled it on, and dreaming sat

      In the firelight - when for God’s own reason

      A shiver of ice along the bone,

      The shock of snow below the skin,

      Confused my soul with a soul alone

      In her fear. The air, and her shawl, were thin;

      She strove barefoot on the mountain

      With child and cart and dying man.

      No songs, no feasts, no star, no inn

      As winter comes to Kurdestan.

      Forward to Index

      WHICH WAY, AND FOR HOW LONG?

      Weird life.

      All that time, that rolls

      Before and around me like an irregular sea.

      A pulse of the world s breath beats like a hill;

      Miles of time

      To move in the mind of the tortoise,

      Spacious years

      For living and dying

      The day-dance of may-flies over the water.

      I have borrowed the slow heart-beat

      That shortens the day

      And swallowed time in a step too vast

      To heed the scurry of rabbit-paths in the thickets.

      I have ticked an hour into more aeons of time

      Than can be counted or conceived by men

      Stripped of empathy and

      Armed with stones.

      The ant burns away a long life,

      And the tree, In the onward rush of seasons.

      Trees grow no taller than I;

      They watch my life as I would watch an ant.

      My day is a second in time

      Their day is eternity

      To a may-fly.

      So what of my strange metabolism

      Flung between the particle and the cosmos?

      To what end my journeys, lonely as love,

      To the last forts of reason?

      Which way,

      Through lands of a million clocks that tell no more

      Than a dandelion puffed away in the wind?

      Forward to Index

      IN LOVE

      A SINGLE ROSE

      One rose

      harbours a world

      shelters a heart

      touches a light

      Wholly

      Strange

      One hand

      cupping a dream

      warming a life

      frames love

      With utmost

      Delicacy

      One glance

      nearly a word

      slowly a touch

      dissolve time

      In falling

      petals

      Forward to Index

      FITTING - 1

      This music is the colour of your eyes

      I look out upon the world from under

      Your soft lashes

      In deep wonder

      And slowly smile your smile

      Without surprise

      Forward to Index

      FITTING - 2

      Let

      the space between

      your

      lips

      and your

      Lovely nose

      Equal

      this

      fractional

      Light-year

      between

      My chin

      and

      Dear delight in

      kissing

      Your nose

      having

      my chin

      very

      Gently

      eaten

      Forward to Index

      IN LOVE

      When you are come,

      My heart flies out like a green

      Bird to meet you.

      By night she wanders in rooms

      Where you might be.

      By day she sits in my head;

      In the mere

      Stir of her feathers

      She hears you coming,

      In a leaf-fall,

      In a green murmur blowing

      Over the fields…

      Only my ears dreaming

      Of when you were last here.

      Forward to Index

      JOY-BRINGER

      God walks in your eyes, across your smile,

      Leaves his footprint in your waiting palm,

      Perfects dominion of your gentleness

      And reaches out along the loving arm.

      You, my redeemer, grace the holiest aisle.

      You enclose me with simplicity,

      Kindle rose fire as you undress

      My soul, naked as pain, maker of me.

      We shall in silver time move sound together;

      Aeons locked in rosary and white heather.

      Forward to Index

      MISSION

      In still wonder

      I am in slow burn

      I’ll get there one day

      Tired light

      Is all left behind

      I and you are

      Naked

      In the dark

      Together

      We are

      Starkly brilliant

      Growing

      Among stars

      Forward to Index

      NIGHT MUSIC

      In that turbulent peace I laid

      My lips in your hair.

      No sound nor move you made.

      I left them there.

      So we remained.

      And so your hand I kept,

      All that had pained

      Me, gone. I held you close. You slept.

      If, in that rose-encircled sleep

      You know me there,

      It is because I weep

      Into your hair;

      Because this night

      Of candled mist has given

      More sad delight

      Than I can bear so far from heaven.

      Forward to Index

      WHEN MY EYES CLOSE…

      When my eyes close, I am your face.

      I am in every place

      In which you move.

      I feel the bone adjust, and the soul stir,

      The entire shape alter.

      And this is love.

      I am empty of me by day till your return,

      I suffer the ice-burn

      Of open time

      And of a loosed life flowing away

      With no tourniquet

      But a crude rhyme.

      When your forested hand should dam my brain,

      Never to cry again,

      Were you to love

      Me as I want you, some way to reconcile

      God with the animal -

      That were enough.

      Forward to Index

      PARTURITION

      She has the child now,

      Suckling blindly at her love,

      Calf-quenching himself

      With now a look of limpid acknowledgement;

      His fist full of the only gold she has to give

      Twisted in sunlit hair.

      - Oh, love is a terrible sad thing, Sam.

      Oh Sam, love, they hoist you out, and she has you.

      With much anguish but more ceremony they cut you free

      Than he is ripped from her heart, her life, her chi,

      Piecemeal, so even the soul bleeds,

      Sam.

      She wonders if this after-blood will ever dry,

      This other milk, common to star and stone,

      Ever ebb from the image of his thirst.

      Even lost in the
    light-sound-cave

      Where she diminished amid echoes

      There was no refuge, Sam, for very long;

      Even where she went down, kindling, and became sizeless

      To help unlock your prison.

      He the shadow moves ever amid the gulf of sound,

      Ghost of a shade

      Slipping between the pulses of her forgiveness

      Without touching,

      Yet unable to lodge guilt safe

      Behind any sonorous membrane of her light.

      Oh, Sam, he thinks it a hell-sun,

      the glory wherein no shred of man nor woman may hide!

      And they abort him from her;

      She cannot fight so many grappling hands.

      Only lie and howl in her silent places

      Like a bewildered beast, and lick each torn part

      Of her ravaged immortality.

      You, whole, lie and perhaps listen

      Out of your own haven;

      You are the child she thinks may understand

      In manhood and learn to forgive the man

      Who ravished so her soul -

      Love can be such a terrible harsh pain,

      Sam.

      Forward to Index

      I SING OF YOU

      O love, oh dear love, alone in the gaslight,

      Lonely and longing I sing of you softly;

      Smiling a little I sing of your beauty.

      Sad white flower,

      weary of infancy,

      Curled in shadow away from the sun,

      In the moon's hour

      You will open unto me,

      Sweetly so touching, oh sweetly done.

      O love, oh dear love, alone in the gaslight,

      Lonely and longing I sing of you softly;

      Looking on dreams I sing of your eyes.

      Shy-coming light,

      Wells of dark in the fells at sunrise

      Fringed with light,

      Blue-misted morning.

      But how they unveil to the welcome night

      With dew in the dusk

      Thither me beckoning!

      O love, oh dear love, alone in the gaslight,

      Lonely and longing I sing of you softly;

      With love in my fingers I sing of your hair.

      Soft as a sparrow and wavy as wind

      On the bird-brown moorland,

      Wild in the air,

     

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