I ought to tell you
I am not in love
And never was
Not what it seems
You ought to know
Since you proposed
It is more than that.
– MM
I ought to tell you
I am not in love
And never was
Not what it seems
You ought to know
Since you proposed
It is more than that.
– MM
Here we are, nestled in a crisp valley
bunkered by rows of apples, cherries, pears and poplars.
Here in a sun trap shaped by the mountains
rounding us like a sleeping curvaceous woman side-lying
covered in an olive green felt blanket of eucalypts and pines.
Her shoulder point is the top of our hill,
our yellow weathered board cottage
rests in the nape of her knee.
Her feet dangle in the cool trout stream
tickled by blackberries and bracken ferns,
by the rivulet.
Way up nigh the crest of her shoulder,
leading down to the crook of her spine,
lays an open range of field lying open to the air,
uncovered and bare.
Tufts of grass populate the open ground
like goose pimples pricked by a cold southern front.
In Summer the sun peers a brazen eye over shoulder
as an outstretched lovers arm,
by winter it illuminates her waist over glittering blanket of white.
A smooth dirt lane weaves a long crooked leg from the rivulet
to a fork-road navel servicing gates, apple sheds and stables.
It narrows and elevates between the cleavage of tended fields
crawling up the neck, waning into a wallaby lair causeway
leading to thickets of densely woven hair.
Nimble and wiry wildlife dart flippantly into this mat of eucalypts,
accustomed to uninterrupted freedom
to feed and increase.
A variety of bungalows lie dormant
amidst the native and exotic rows of foliage within the valley.
Smoking incessantly, knowing their days are numbered,
the chimneys breathe warmth and life into living rooms
adorned with walls of ancestry.
Layers of generations cover and insulate the rooms,
years of wallpaper, wood, tile and paint,
defending its age and masking the wrinkles of time.
Eyes peer out warped windows twitching at the treetops,
hibernating while the cold becomes stronger.
Bulbs push through the barrier of clay
to herald the coming of Spring
and the blossoms obey
spreading out in their millions,
a white spray along the legs
of lady mountain.
I’m sorry
for the harsh feeling
I harboured
against you
only those
who mean so much
are capable of causing
so much grief.
I wish you
Rest & Peace.
Image source: Sunderland Echo
We fight fiercely
We sacrifice earnestly
But never surrender
For our friends
Amicitiae nostrae memoriam spero sempiternam fore – Cicero
“I hope that the memory of our friendship will be everlasting.”
Mother hen, sibling, friend
Her eyes light up each morning
at little mouths yawning
They look for her, seek her out
She dries their tears, wipes their mouth
A tender big heart resides in slender body
Delights in her sister’s song
Her brother’s clumsy sentence long
Never alone, day or night
They all fill up the pew
They wrestle and yell, argue and fight
Longing as soon one departs the room
Their blood lines run deep, our kinship are few
Big brothers and lovers are all I knew
I myself, born too late
Still such love I can relate
Kindred spirit born anew.
dark matter gravitates
Towards our centre
Words swirl in disarray
Endlessly meditate
Fullness of weight
She doesn’t need you
He doesn’t want to see you
She doesn’t care
He has no time to spare
She has other friends
He says you’re full on
She thinks you’re just wrong
His other lover returned
Words heard but spurned
Silence consumes like a black hole.
Explode.
Then stars are flung endlessly
Like the force of creation
At the sound of those words
I care
You are there.
Our lives are like a bottomless well
From which I yield buckets of
Inspiration.
I would never utter an unkind word
For fear of poisoning the source
My only hope is that I give
As much in return
Or at least not run it dry
For if I did
I would humbly say
Goodbye.
– that woman
Image source – Hamilton Springs Texas
“A pointed word, once it is spoken or written, cannot be cut away with an axe.”
– Nikolai Gogol in Dead Souls
Sound advice
mere human
dose taken
measure of salt
from bedrock
only reason
good taste
nor revolt
salt of earth
are we
spread to nourish
cover over
unpleasantness
foul taste and toil
measured out
abundantly
one good recipe
let us not
lose our saltiness
lest we all
may spoil
Image – Salt mine worker
Some stories better left untold
Others build us prison walls
but when uttered they dissolve
unchained altar call
Like a caged bird flapping
fighting endlessly
Decides to sing its heart song
then gentle hands set free.
Poem inspired by:
Prison Fellowship of Australia – Art from Inside Project