After
Visiting Dove Cottage
So, Mr Wordsworth,
inside Dove Cottage’s darkened rooms, tiny,
with slight gifts of light spilt through cobwebbed
windows, you wrote your works. Children scooted
round your feet or tugged your dominant, inked hand
and thinning hair. Cries of Dada ricocheted around
when Dorothy or Mary let slip their stoic minding of
these lively sprites, offspring of your loins. Distempered,
stone walls embraced your tribe; feet skidded on floors, damp
with run-off from the hills.
Coated
up, you sought air, space
and inspiration on high fells, before returning
to distil
wild experience
into rare poetics.
Sorely you were tried
amid domesticity’s rude chaos. Yet consider: how much
further were your wife and sister stretched. Did you
acknowledge their sacrifices? Today, I ponder on
how their youthful musings, their desires, possibly slid
away –
when lacking time and energy to concentrate
on matters of the mind, endlessly denied
access to dreaming’s fertile uplands.
Dorothy’s journals whisper
secrets slipped beneath all-consuming mundanities. In another age
she might have born other words, other forms, to life. Mary
carried on, uncomplaining.
Two loyal women, they both loved you,
loved your work, loved your progeny, but I think they paid a price.
You thrived, as your busy family jumbled to survive.
Internal
Dialogue Whilst Waiting for Transport
Would you want to
know. Know what.
Know if you were dying. I don’t
know, maybe. Do you fear the end.
Everything ends. Are you reconciled
to ending, to fading into nothing.
Perhaps there is something, but
I doubt it. The appointment letter
sits on my mantelpiece. Today,
my consultant will say. Prosecco’s
chilling in the fridge, to celebrate
or commiserate, with myself. Later.
The others, the ones that mattered,
are long gone. They were brave
enough to face their fate, except
my cruel mother who passed
peacefully in her sleep. Me,
I guess I’ll rage at the dying
of the light. My taxi’s here.
Lachrymose
Raindrops dangle from windswept snowdrops,
heads bent towards the earth. Poppies, blood-red,
petals scattered by storms. Crows’ petrolled corpses
are spiked on barbed wire by shattered farmers. Famine
is caused by man-made sieges. Funeral masses are sung
alongside marching songs. Sons wave goodbye.
Fathers’ orphan children to save natal lands
from other fathers. How long
will this go on.
When will mothers cry for joy again –
and ploughshares pattern fields, seeded
to grow, in peace.
Roofs have blown off two houses
in our street, pandemic winds
have seen to that. First one dad left,
then another, exposing home schooled
children and their careworn mothers
to lessons far beyond their control.
Even where pantiles or slates remain,
tempests erode inhabitants within.
Ugly arguments pound shared lives
locked down in claustrophobic
living rooms and airless bedrooms.
Kitchens are sharp with carving knives
ready to slice food for poorly seasoned
meals; times when no one laughs
or talks, except in temper. Apparently,
storm damage is the norm, nowadays.
At last, today seems calmer. I spotted
a woodpecker; soon after, a roofer called.
Note:
In many ancient cultures, the symbolism of the woodpecker is associated
with wishes, luck, prosperity, and spiritual healing. Other cultures consider
the woodpecker to represent hard work, perseverance, strength, and
determination.
Ceinwen E Cariad Haydon, [MA Creative Writing, Newcastle 2017]
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