Saturday, 23 December 2017

Changing patterns:



Moisture on the glass,
frost on the grass
and smoke on the breath —
when I was young, feet
in the sub-zero morning
left footprints upon the lawn
 and my hands ached with the cold.

There was the time we found the sheet,
abandoned on the line overnight,
hard as cardboard —
mum gave it a whack with the wrong end
of a broom, the ice fell off
in a sudden burst of laughter.

Buses came late in winter,
pies were too hot at school
and in the afternoon, frozen,
I’d sit before the old briquette heater
hurriedly splicing kindling,
scrunching the newspaper, setting the fire to burn.

Now weather patterns are tamed
except in catastrophes, some days are summer,
then winter and back again;
plants bloom, turn to seed and flower over
as rain sweeps across, disappears
for weeks into months
and comes in flood
like an old man who forgets everything
until he remembers in a torrent of words.

We have caused the world to over-compensate,
I can see it in my garden —
everything adopts a haphazard approach,
falls in despair
then sprouts again with hope;

in the soil, worms gather, witches
around a cauldron, know no matter
the magic they weave
they cannot bring the time that was back.

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