DEAD DOG
For my father
In a unit for the
mentally infirm
I offer you my
love in the form of a dog
so lifelike you
expect its tail to wag
or its soft muzzle
to crinkle into smiles.
It’s a collie – a
she, a Daisy-dog to give comfort
when your night-walls
are soughed by the demented
and God has
forgotten the numbered password at your door.
I have seen the
woman with her baby many times,
its doll head
bobbing on her ribs,
the lullaby that
sings upon her tongue
a comfort only to
the bogus child
immured within
those skinned and skinny limbs.
She walks the ward
oblivious to all but
what contentment
comes before
the longer shreds
of darkness that will
swallow up her
memory whole.
So I tender you my
good intent –
this spurious gift
I think will link an alien present
with the familiar
past but even then,
with all that has
been lost to you,
you recognise its
falsity.
‘That’s a dead
dog,’ you say,
the words raged
from that part of you
still holding on
and holding on.
GONE
For my mother
Even now your
warmth tortures me
though you decided
for yourself
to leave without
us being there.
And me, wishing
you back,
able only to stare
at the hollow of
your throat
to a pulse
extinguished
suddenly to
stillness.
For in the end we
are simply left
with sadnesses,
their shadows
shocking
as they cross the
sun,
while in between
remains
the light that
says life carries on,
only because it
does.
IS THIS WHAT I DO?
For my aunt
On a corridor of fresh-painted
magnolia
sunbeams stroke
from Velux windows
onto freckled
carpets, while a television
talks too loudly
to itself in someone’s room.
I find you
sleeping, head sagged
as on a mis-hung
coat hanger, hair,
just brushed,
still full of war-time curls,
a legacy that did
not pass itself to me.
I say your name,
see the reluctant
wakening of your
eyes, the disappointment
you had not slept
your way to heaven.
You have told me
this before.
Today we talk of
blue dresses and funerals
and how you love
my coat, and how
you love my coat,
the colour redolent
of something
already scudding out of view.
You ask me now if
this is what you do,
just sit and wait,
and wait and sit,
the resignation in
your voice
the hardest thing
for me to bear.
For in this room,
that thief of time
has measured out
its false remembrance in
the ticking of a
clock, as the past becomes the present
and the present
loiters somewhere in the past.
Congratulations. Three remarkable and very meaningful Poems. Thank you
ReplyDeleteLynda