Innocence
Learning Jean-Pierre’s father living nearby had consumed it
every day for 70 years overcame my fear of unpasteurised milk
that first evening daring to break free of a lifelong prejudice
swinging my enamelled jug by its handle I passed in my great-coat
through the cloud of my breath down the road to the dairy farm
queued beside washed stainless steel buckets hanging upside down
on yellow pegs everyone peering deep into the vast dimly-lit barn
waiting patiently for the milking to be finished cows side by side
in their Alpine winter retreat a warm fug of shit piss straw
the breath of eighty masticating cows content as queen bees attended
like workers by the farmer and his wife with the dull thud
of rubber boots and a metallic clunk the two-handled milk can arrived
and with jugs full and the farmer’s wife smiling
with her handful of coins we dispersed like moths to the lights
of farmhouse windows in the attic my temporary home I set
the jug on the table and early next morning lifted the lid to find
two fingers of cream surfaced in the night the poêle à mazout
coaxed into life I smothered my porridge with the fresh cream savoured
the unctuous you could almost say fruity flavour
and wondered about all the other low hanging fruit I had never tasted
The silence between
The village was usually quiet
after
the twittering of the martins was silenced by the night
occasionally a shouted altercation between
our half-mad
bully
of a neighbour and his trembling wife once
the Welsh builder fired a gun from his
roof to test it
and
the patience of neighbours in the rue
Saint Jean
later denying to Monsieur le Maire he even owned a gun
but
usually it was quiet at night except for the roar of motorcycles
reverberating between stone houses and
around the café
where
drunken twenty somethings yelled and argued
about nothing car radios sonic booming
across the square
but
usually it was quiet at night except for yowling dogs
their sensitive ears assaulted by the
cracked church bell
religiously
counting out the hours but usually it was
so quiet that footsteps ringing on the
cobbled streets
cut
the air with particular clarity in the small hours
stray cats soundlessly scaled high walls
and wire fences
with
astonishing agility one night awake at my
third floor window I saw the filthy white
tomcat emerge
from
the shadow of the portalet at my
finger nail tap
on the window pane he stopped a full
minute one paw raised
as
if to strike a note on a black or white key eyes fixed
on the score of my window a reminder that
every silence
also
holds a meaning before his mission recalled he blended
with a shadow and the usual quiet of the
village night
Activity in the village peaks approaching noon as if
a happening of some importance were to begin wafting
down the cobbled rues from open windows the aroma
of bubbling boeuf en daube from busy kitchens entices
the church to bell reminder of another dozen at a supper
in the carpark vehicles from nearby villages shuffle customers
split from the bakery queue in ones and twos artisanal baguettes
in hand to cross the square and vanish into homes of stone
from which the instant clinks of cutlery and plates the droll
drum of pots and pans proceeds until all sounds dull and fade
all motions cease and every person and his dog sink
into afternoon somnolence outside in solstice heat
the shadows shrink an eerie quiet prevails as if the village
were abandoned to plunder by merciless invaders where
throat-cut bodies strewn in the ancient rues would not
be out of place few remnant signs of life exist a sudden gust
picks up and twirls a page of newspaper bold geraniums resist
the dare to tumble from their window box white washing
waves from balconies and then…
a tractor motor throbs a motorcycle revs a car horn blares
as one by one half-woken villagers stagger into blazing light
thus ends the quotidian rehearsal for the resurrection day
Mayhem in the Rubens room
What are they up to, these putti
dancing around the lids of Roman
sarcophagi?
Has the spirit of the deceased
slipped
out to join a bacchanalian revel?
The breed, mercifully lost for a
millennium,
re-appears—there is no mistaking them—
as early Renaissance cupids.
I ask, what can these chubby children
with their stupid quivers, bows and
arrows,
know
of adult love?
Unleashing passions willy-nilly through
all creation,
selecting lovers by propinquity,
two easy shots, their job is done.
Capricious actions unhappily the cause
of ravishings, abductions, ridiculous
mismatches.
And in the Rubens room,
walls hung with vast religious tableaux,
rich reds and blues
and swirling figures in extravagant
baroque,
I
could only see the putti—
with ridiculous stumpy wings that could
in no way elevate infants so unpleasingly
plump as these—
proliferating
in every possible space,
but now forsaking carnal love
for religious adoration like the cherubim.
They are in bounteous supply as pairs and
threesomes
at the crowning of the Virgin; and in
tumbling riot
at the Assumption, waving fronds and
crowns of flowers,
their unwelcome presence negating all
religious feeling
—at
least for me—
from the otherwise grand and glorious
depictions.
And,
I can hardly believe my eyes,
a pair of cherubs, arms entwined, showing
prurient interest
in the martyrdom of Saint Liévin, a grisly
vision
barely suitable for adults and definitely
unfit
for little naked boys with wings.
How can viewers accept them with such
equanimity?
Ugh. Even the name, putti, is coarse, unmusical.
A terrifying thought—what if heaven is
full of them?
Exceptions
Although not a writer in the margins of
books
I confess to be an avid reader of this
singular art form.
I do write appointments in the margins of
my diaries,
an only exception—
the one gifted by a Japanese friend
with images of vermillion gates of
shrines, bold bamboo stands,
terraced rice fields, mossy rocks, raked
sand
—so
Zen, breath falters, the pen falls from my hand.
I scribble any notebook with writings and
drawings,
an irrepressible and apparently vital
habit. Half used
and scattered everywhere, I never refer to
them again.
An only exception—
a
notebook of pachyderm paper
made by a Sri Lankan foundation for the
care
of elderly and disabled elephants. I
imagine
men wheeling steaming dung in barrows,
washing, pulping,
dispersing fibres caught and dried on
screens
—then
cut and bound into the paper of my notebook,
the sale of which has helped care for
these remarkable animals.
Many times poised to write in this book,
I’ve stopped,
unable to defile by words this model of
recycling at its best.
Exceptional, too—
that
a book unwritten and unread can speak
so eloquently, on love and kindness
between so different beings.
Ron
Wilkins is a Sydney scientist who has had poems published in Australian,
American, Chinese and French literary journals. His poetry website is
www.fistfulofdust.com
His hobby is the identification of the more than 900 species of
eucalypts.
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