Read Small Things Page 4


  and in this way,

  slowly

  over the years

  my bed became

  intimate;

  a home

  inside home,

  a haven,

  a sanctuary,

  a place of retreat

  from the witness of eyes,

  in sickness,

  in sleep,

  in the embraces of love.

  I have never thanked it.

  But I do so now,

  my bed

  which supports me,

  which has taken in

  my tears

  and my sighs,

  which has known

  my weight

  from childhood to man,

  and which one day

  will bear

  what is left

  of my body

  when the spirit

  has flown.

  REDOLENCE

  So many pathways

  lead from the fragrance

  of sad bonfires.

  Lost autumns

  and forgotten summers

  re-emerge as perfumed ghosts,

  and with them rise

  those faded versions of ourselves

  which only smoke can resurrect.

  Everything that burns

  at one time lived

  and played its part

  in this great game.

  Now, in us, the leaves return,

  and in the smoke

  each breath we take

  rekindles life,

  and sparks remembrance

  of old fires

  and the days on which we set them.

  THE VETERAN

  For Roger Mayo

  In Delville Wood

  there stands a tree.

  Smaller than the rest

  which grew in peace,

  it has the look of one

  who’s seen too much.

  Its limbs seem undecided

  on which way to grow,

  and bear their leaves

  with some reluctance,

  perhaps not trusting summers

  to be worth their while.

  Black waters

  covered up its friends.

  They sank with iron

  and with men

  and disappeared.

  The flutter

  of fair foliage

  did them no good;

  it brought no truce.

  Reduced to pulp,

  their flesh dissolved

  and fertilised

  the broken earth.

  Yet one survived,

  as did the seeds

  of others now grown tall,

  and each year still

  new blossoms form,

  and life goes on

  in Delville Wood.

  FINZI – ECLOGUE FOR PIANO & ORCHESTRA

  Once,

  from the muffled stillness

  of an upstairs room,

  I heard a piano played.

  In privacy,

  the player turned the sounds

  toward himself,

  as intimate as words he spoke

  when at his bath.

  But they were beautiful.

  If I can speak of hauntings

  I would declare myself

  beneath the spell

  of those clear sounds,

  still, after fifty years,

  which on that sunny afternoon

  my ears retained.

  There was about the place

  the smell of old wood,

  polish, and of something faded,

  but the music fell

  like fresh clean water

  onto thirsty soil,

  and sank there,

  never to be lost

  from that warm day.

  How curious

  that after all that time,

  on hearing it again,

  the sequence of those lilting notes

  should cause me pain,

  as though the intervening years

  were peeled away

  and what lay bared

  was tender as the skin

  I wore in those past days.

  And of the player –

  now long dead –

  who, musing on that tune,

  had lent it wings?

  He never knew

  where it had flown.

  But that is art:

  a message

  sent off like a dove,

  with hope,

  yet blindly

  into empty air.

  ENDINGS

  We sit amongst the pigeons

  and the tired grass,

  the park bench like an island

  in the ebb and flow.

  We use those words,

  the ones designed to state the obvious

  whilst hiding truths.

  But we both know.

  Above, in cooling air,

  the crows have gathered one by one

  to form dark punctuation

  in the falling sky.

  The laughter of a passing child

  does not belong,

  and once green leaves

  turn first to amber, then to red.

  It’s summer’s end when warmth declines.

  September’s come, the buddleia dies,

  and butterflies come

  no more.

  FROM A DISTANT PLACE

  When the wind comes howling

  there is only one night,

  the night which began long ago

  over many decades,

  when I lay in a clean bare room

  and the wind was my companion.

  It came to me like all other winds,

  from a distant place,

  perhaps from the silent stones

  of a quiet valley where

  slender reeds bowed to its presence

  and it filled its lungs.

  The cold sky fed it,

  the warmth of the dry land

  nurtured its power till

  the space between mountains

  could not contain it,

  and it rode out into the world.

  To the boy in a bed

  in a clean bare room

  it came with stories,

  a whispering giant

  that told of the seas

  with its toiling ships;

  of the hounded trees and their secret roots,

  of the stark moon rising.

  It came with tales as old as the Earth,

  of the turbulent sky

  and of all the creatures

  that labour beneath it.

  It is the same wind,

  the same coming and going of breath,

  of maddened atoms that belong to the centuries.

  All the stories of mankind go on.

  Swept up like dust,

  our words and our sighs go on for ever.

  BLACKBIRD

  When the blackbird opens

  its orange throat

  its song unravels

  a bright thread of life.

  The top of the tree

  is adorned by its chant,

  the evening is calmed,

  the sun talked down

  into distant lands.

  We have but a lifetime

  in which to assemble

  a reason for living,

  and our words lay bare

  the bones of our longing.

  We have no wings,

  we do not sing truly;

  the weight of shadows

  is with us always.

  But there in the blackbird

  the spirit of exultation lives

  as sharp as a thorn.

  It moves through the universe

  borne by its simple

  unquestioning courage,

  and its heart

  forces joy out

  into the world.

  NOCH EIN BIER!

  So, dear friends,
r />
  it’s one more beer!

  Raise the arm

  and let the golden light

  soak down, a cold clear pull

  that’s cleaner

  than the swept blue sky.

  It moves

  from mouth to veins,

  a river in reverse

  whose estuary

  draws in the ocean’s cool,

  and quenches every tributary

  and each dry stream

  and arid bank.

  We walkers

  who have trodden stone and dust,

  now wash away the hardship

  with a song

  from last year’s summer

  in a frozen glass,

  an amber sprite

  distilled from wheat

  and sunlight

  in a soft

  undoing.

  KINDRED

  On the folds of your face something extraordinary

  has happened every day.

  Smiles have blossomed there unexpectedly,

  seeding the room with a sudden benevolence.

  By the use of your lips

  you have signalled to me

  that all things are shared.

  Out of sound you have conjured laughter,

  a bubbling trill that travels

  amongst the stones of your teeth,

  the rosy hummock of your tongue,

  and makes its journey outward

  into the blue shadows,

  the hard compress of old sorrows.

  Out of air you have moulded words

  which remain impossibly,

  hung in the heart like vapour trails.

  For we are human, you and I,

  and seek our own kind through small deeds

  and sounds which, though short-lived,

  will bind our lives together.

  GLACIER

  It fell as snow

  silently

  on unheard peaks

  beyond the reach of soaring birds,

  of lonely footpaths,

  and there it settled still as stars,

  a frost

  night-deep and ready for the dream.

  Long years embraced it,

  locked, entombed

  in blue pearl sleep

  whilst it descended

  slower than the creep of moons,

  of forests.

  The world span on.

  So many suns would rise and fall

  upon this steady march of winter.

  Yet in the end

  A stroke from one last spring

  awoke it.

  It dripped and played

  round rummaged rocks,

  its song a thread of silver

  spun from ice,

  a life made liquid,

  given wings.

  And on it streamed,

  rushing now,

  its voice grown stronger

  as it ran,

  surging through the yawning slopes,

  the green cathedrals of the trees

  and us,

  this passing moment in the life

  of fresh triumphant water.

  THE COOLING

  So it’s true then: we all grow old,

  even I who understood

  that in my case this was not so.

  After all, I was no fool; I’d seen

  the truth that children see:

  the old were surely always old,

  the young forever young.

  How could I – this central being,

  this kernel that remains unchanged,

  this constant voice, this conduit

  through which every joy and sorrow flows –

  how could I grow old?

  But I was wrong.

  Though summer is a long affair

  which bathes us in a haze

  of rich green light and endless days,

  it lulls the heart, for where

  is winter in those winding ways

  of warmth and soft blue hills?

  To reach this time

  I travelled from a fabled past,

  a land of gentle ghosts

  and altered truths, a broken film

  which dust and wishes make more real.

  The odour of the past endures,

  its meaning lingers in the shapes of words.

  I hear it still in strains of music

  from those far off rooms,

  and blackbirds in the evening.

  So hard to watch the flesh decline

  and match it to this voice which sings

  as strong as thrushes in an April tree.

  The frosts of autumn settle on the limbs

  and flesh that summer wrought.

  It is the way; the year moves on.

  And one night, quietly,

  the snow will come.

  METAMORPHOSIS

  It was fate and nothing more

  that let me see it –

  the slab of rock

  that hung out like a pouting lip

  above the gorge.

  My eyes had come to rest upon it

  quite by chance,

  and in that instant,

  as if my gaze alone

  was one too many burdens for its back,

  the whole mass fell away.

  A piece far larger than a house

  detached itself and dropped

  with slow and easy grace

  into the green and quiet valley.

  And as it fell

  it seemed to me

  a planet all its own.

  Trees grew upon it, creatures;

  a little world with rainfall,

  grass, its light and shade;

  it was a stronghold, terra firma, home.

  For what vast aeons had it perched there

  till that day, that one in millions

  when I saw it end?

  The sound of its demise

  boomed through the valley,

  taking seconds

  for the shock to rip and ripple

  round the peaks,

  and what had been so constant

  through the summers and the snows

  of countless years

  now came apart like biscuit

  in a giant’s hand.

  The dust of death rained down

  on startled fields,

  drifting wraithlike

  through the greening shoots.

  It settled there with no laments,

  no violins, only the hiss

  of waterfalls in quiet air.

  I stood and watched

  this strange becoming,

  this transformation

  from the great to small,

  till the calm of summer

  reassembled

  and was whole once more.

  Till the very last moment

  an apple remains attached to its tree.

  But, having fallen, it never returns.

  This is our story.

  DAYDREAMER

  There were wonders always

  inside whichever world he'd entered.

  The call of clouds drew him away;

  he drifted in and out of hours

  like sunlight on the patchwork fields.

  A passing shower, the scattering of autumn leaves

  were breath enough to lift his wings;

  he lived immersed in wondrous days

  and witnessed time

  surrender to his needs.

  Where did he go,

  that slender boy

  who watched the silent pathways,

  star-strewn nights,

  who delved the hidden mystery

  in shadowed pools?

  He lives here still.

  I carry him

  wrapped up in wrinkled skin,

  inside old bones.

  His voice still speaks

  the language learned

  in daydreams long ago.

  And where he goes

>   I follow still.

  He knows as he has always known

  the pull of life in simple worlds:

  in mists and shadows,

  fire and snow.

  TONIGHT AND FOR EVER.

  It is evening like all other evenings

  when the trees transmute into the essence of trees.

  So quietly the sound of the river rises,

  and the voice of the bird is there once again,

  punching holes in the exhausted sky.

  This is the place,

  and above all others now is the time.

  When the light at last fails do the trees lament?

  Do the poppies grow mournful

  because there are not enough days?

  It is only we with our words who will grieve.

  Tomorrow perhaps a cool wind will ruffle

  the confident stars, but tonight and for ever,

  let the jasmine bring us the whole of the summer

  sharpened into a single breath.

  THREE CATS

  OLLY

  Cats do not

  race humans up the stairs,

  then swagger with conceited pride

  at having won.

  They do not

  embrace the heads of people

  with gentle or ferocious love.

  Cats do not

  come swaggering in like Al Capone

  and grab the cheese

  from kitchen tops,

  nor, if denied, beat up the dog,

  or lie across the hall

  with flexing claws.

  But you did, Olly Bear.

  Your vast tail like a startled

  feather duster, held aloft,

  heralded your entrance to a room.

  And all who saw you

  could not leave that presence unannounced,

  oh, Olly Bear.

  NOOKA

  Nooka Belle,

  you did not stay with us for long,

  yet graced us with your lion's mane

  and clear gold gaze

  as timeless as the Sphinx

  you liked to be.

  You came to us when snow lay on the ground,

  and left in early spring

  when daffodils were blooming.

  Each year, for those with eyes,

  new marvels and new beauties will unfold;

  you were one of those, our little Nooka,

  brief and lovely.

  And so, to you, our golden girl, farewell.

  HANK

  Hank,

  you were

  the naughtiest

  of cats.

  Your nimble toes

  could hook

  the food

  from other's bowls.

  You grew

  quite fat.

  Often

  you would sit

  and tear off strips

  from books or diaries,

  or slowly push

  a milk jug

  off a table.

  We'd rush

  towards you,

  faces set in anger,