The Tree of Life
I’ve watched the tree outside my window grow
Each year, each decade, greater and more green
A mighty maturation, quiet and slow
Wind-tossed, rain-soaked, sun-scorched and yet
serene
Until a gnarled profusion fills the eye
And rears its sprightly splendour to the sky.
I too am old, and yet my body’s shrunk
And all I am seems lesser than before.
My weakened flesh and troubled mind have sunk
And shrivelled round a hard, protesting core
Which snarls “I wasn’t meant to be this way!”
While sense and senses dwindle day by day.
But I am not that tree, and it is wrong
To use such simple sights to weigh my worth
As if my limbs could ever be so strong
As if my years were measured by my girth.
The life I’ve led has grown through time, not
space
A flowering of the spirit, not the face.
And when I look across the years behind
Though many are the things that I forget
Some glimpses of some goodness come to mind:
The children whom I raised, who love me yet
And friends and neighbours succoured year on
year
With help, advice and patient listening ear.
The shape’s elusive; others saw but parts
Some facet of myself, some shard of me.
The whole’s in fragments, hidden in their hearts
The look and stature of my lifetime’s tree
A jigsaw puzzle waiting for the hand
To build it, and the brain to understand.
Perfection is illusion; still I hope
That one day, when my all is said and done
That picture of my soul for which I grope
Will form itself before the eye of One
Whose seeing is the font of time and space
Whose loving is the source of every grace.
And then, who knows? Perhaps the life I’ve led
Will bear the Gardener’s scrutiny, and be
With shining leaves aflutter, branches spread
An image of that one Edenic tree
That Adam missed; and, greater than before
I’ll eat its fruit, and live forevermore.
Nancy MacCulloch (1925-2019)
Sun Bird
A pigeon lies decapitated, leaking on the road
A feathered lump of sorrow or a cipher, one whose code
Is written in the excrement that daubs the deadened cars
Inscribed among the groping weeds and patterned in the stars
A message barely understood but poisonous with fear:
The horror is endemic - we are interlopers here.
The pigeon-killing foxes overrun the straggling lawn
I hear their scornful squeaking in the dark before the dawn
A chorus of derision - we have botched the hunter’s part
As surely as we botched our role in Eden at the start
And most of what we try to do is neither here nor there
A passing stain upon the earth or stench upon the air.
What hope for such a misfit rabble, scratching in the dirt
To build a tattered shelter in a universe of hurt?
The chaos born of entropy, the crumbling in decay
The only law that ultimately all of us obey.
To write of it, to revel in it, scrawl it on the page:
The squawking of a pigeon off its head with futile
rage.
In far-off lands in ancient days a better bird was known
Which spared itself the sin of Eve of all the birds alone
An emblem of perfection resurrected time on time
To reconcile the cosmos with the fractured human rime.
So when the headless pigeons smear the highways with despair
Look deep within your heart and find the phoenix nesting
there.
Crock of Gold
When the lizards looked up to a rainbowed sky
Through the murk of the swamp of a green world’s dawn
Was it then that the dream of the gold was born
In the star-sharp glint of a reptile eye?
(Does a rub with a gold ring cure a sty?)
When the first warm beasts roamed the ice-free plains
And their hides drew tight as the clouds swelled dark
Did they sniff for the promise of a pastel arc
Like the arch of an exit from the shimmering rains?
(If we purge what is base is it gold that remains?)
Now a man probes the void with an eye grown great
And the farther he sees past the old sun’s glow
Then the more that it seems that he’ll never know
What it is that he’d find through the rainbow gate
For the distance is long, so its light comes late.
But the quest carries on towards the cosmic heart
Where it beats out its pulse in the ancient black
As the light-years traversed peel the ages back
Till we see what was there at the very start
- See the bright dense whole of which all was part.
Then the stars burn out and the worlds drift cold
And the vast curved course of the dream is done
And the treasure lost is the treasure won
For we soared to the source of creation’s gold
And the myth that we made is a history told.
Effusion
The flowers bulge with pregnancies of light
As buttery stormglow saturates the scene
A landscape pulsing garish to invite
The waters that will wash its fever clean
Translating what its oozing colours mean.
So when the sodden verdure sprays its glints
Of light delivered sparkling from on high
Those leafy constellations whisper hints
Of what the sun has spoken in the sky
In answer to the flowers’ question why.
That answer’s not for us to see in full
We view instead a softly curving part
The ribbons that the dancing raindrops pull
Uniting all the tints of Nature’s art
In glow of sun and glow of flower’s heart.
To draw our burning storm-bred colours out
As Nature has her waters, we have speech
Emotion and experience one vast shout
Suspended at the limits of our reach
To join us, heart and cosmos, each to each.
Jack O’Lantern
I tricked the Devil, the Devil tricked me
Oh, ’twas rare fun that we had!
Quick as a whip I was, one, two, and three!
Caught in my purse-strings or stuck up a tree
Made me a bargain, then let him go free.
Look at me now, my lad.
Hands off my soul, never take it, I said
Sure, for my life had been bad
Fearing the fire, I was, once I was dead
Wanted to get me to heaven instead
Never was slow about using my head.
Look at me now, my lad.
When my time came there was nowhere to go
Truly, I must have been mad
Jack wasn’t wanted above or below
Devil just laughed when St Peter said no
Gave me this coal - “Light your way with its glow”.
Look at me now, my lad.
Out in the boglands when evening comes creeping
Weary and lonesome and sad
That’s where you’ll see me, if you should come peeping
Looking for Jack while the good folk are sleeping.
Look then - my face, where the Devil-fire’s leaping!
Look at me now, my lad!
Sure that’s just a legend, a fool’s-fire, a lie
Tales, and for that I am glad
Life’s for the living, you die when you die
Head made a hollow whatever you try
Carved on your gravestone, a grinning goodbye:
Look at me now, my lad.
Simon MacCulloch lives in London and is a regular contributor to Reach Poetry, The Dawntreader and Aphelion.
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