Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Fine

Colloquially speaking,
It is just a case of a
'Wayward Spirit'
Which sounds,
When put like that,
Quite charming;
Sparky, don't you
Think? After all,
It's not like you
'Served up your soul'
On a silver platter,
Extending invisible
Grams forward in
A fine spun, porous,
Net-veined manner.
Lets not split hairs.
We are refined; both
Delicate - marked by
Subtlety of discernment
And even though
I cannot often follow
These fine distinctions
Between design
And the undevised,
My soul has always
Wandered wayward
Through transpicuous doors
And home: no silver platter,
Just a fine-tooth comb,
To serve.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Skeletons 1954, Mexico (Frida Kahlo)

He took photos
To capture his favourite child
To frame the world
Or his vision of it.

She Painted
Tin paintings
To collect
And decorate
Her world.

A sun, a moon
And Pyramids;
Grey skyscrapers
For criticism,
Dead babies for freedom.

She was crushed,
Childless
And from her bed
Passion plays
Out with pictures
Of her pets,
Painted, "with no consideration"
Although she cared
About them all.

A jungle is always
In limited colour.
A monkey sits
In her arms,
Unaware of her presence.
She - unaware of his,
Her black hair a solid mass
Individual strands - there, but not seen.

Skeletons leap from the cupboard
Elegantly smiling.






05/06

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Grace

There is no mercy, caritas, or thanks
In the everyday moments of a greedy life.
We would have to look for it
On a plate before we eat,
In the flesh of a tender fish,
In a fresh bread of wheat,
And afterwards, in a moment
Captured, well after the blessings given
For the honest way
Or the elegant way
We attempted to floss our teeth

Saturday, July 11, 2009

The Golden Egg

At The Golden Egg, a cafe,
where ugly folk eat all day breakfasts,
we sip, smoke, read The Mirror,
The Sun, take notes in reams.

An old couple in bobble hats,
crater moon expressions
face their plates, each other,
over his fried slice and beans.

They slurp with all the time in the world.
I think they must be cold,
no jokes, nothing more to win.
I think it's all over - until she chokes,
dribbles on a bit of gristle
and he wipes the egg yolk from her chin.

I can still smell the Eucalyptus

Apache, the tanned horse we'd found,
had been lost from the grazing garden above the town.
We led him to our home, borrowed brushes...
Neighbourly folk came with herbs in cooking pots,
their kindly tin-wrapped remedies for wounds.
From our purple veranda
we watched him graze in the moonlight
and in the quiet of the noisy night
he must have slipped our gaze,
flicked the bolted gate
and then, again escaped!

From the telegraph poles, the owls hooted
and took flight, so we turned right
to find him on the silvery ribbon road
waiting by the forest of Eucalyptus.
You took his face, spoke his name, scolding
and stroking his nose. "He's well - he wants
company: Patch? Were you waiting for us?"
and taking his mane, you cartwheeled onto his back,

like you should, a sound now, getting faster and lighter
into the darkening tangles and slow soft places
of the fine pine wood.





06
07

Thursday, July 09, 2009

harvest

you know as sure as it is
soft and light around my shoulders
and warm as a mango sun
dipping the line dividing you and me
that the fruit of our labour
is a basket upon the sea
so tell me of one thing more magical
than the harvest on the table
this candle this flame
flickering here and there
vulnerable
to a darkness this night
will never swallow whole