Cloister
Linking the cloisters to cathedral close
the passageway, clean-walled, flagged floor,
though light
feels dim and threatening, haunted by
ghosts,
in which I do not believe! Yet at night
I would not walk through here, and in the
day
hold breath until the other side is gained.
Morbid thoughts and dread fears I hold at
bay
till bright sky and space have once more
explained
away the claustrophobic attitude,
the remembrance in stone of wicked deeds
perhaps: white-wash over decrepitude
if you must, but violence intercedes.
Do not run, be watchful, do not loiter
in this gullet between close and cloister.
High Priest of Nimrud
Adorned with
splendour, he approaches the tree,
the holy tree,
bearing life-giving fruit.
Arrayed in
priestly finery, he is given courage,
granted permission,
to take fruit from the tree,
the holy tree,
which gives life.
In avian disguise,
feathered wings and raptorial head
he dares to come
near to the tree,
the holy tree,
which yields to his touch.
He wears amulets
and signs of his divine office,
he is scented from
the bath, to come cleanly to his task,
even his hair is
freshly curled, falling to his shoulders,
perfumed and
oiled.
He strides towards
the tree, the holy tree.
In his left hand
he carries the basket,
which only he may
handle, and with his right
he reaches to the
tree, the holy tree, and plucks the fruit
which is freely
given up to him.
He will place it
in the basket, and return, with full ceremony
to eat of the
fruit, to give fruit to the worshippers.
He stands for all
time, this priest of Nimrud, stands for us all
approaching the
sacred with trepidation, yet with confidence
in the divine
mercy.
Death in the Churchyard
Death swoops suddenly,
silently
on pointed wings, razored
talons reaching in readiness.
The churchyard speaks
only of death, contradicting
the fragile mauve
spears of opening crocus
and the swelling buds
of sycamore and lime.
The gravestones,
limestone, slate, carved, eroded
by rain and wind, tell
of families, of the sufferings of infants,
of wives, decorated
with leaves and flowers, fogged with moss,
obscured by lichen,
worn by time itself.
A fallen slab has been
visited in the night, by grazing snails,
leaving clean tracks
eaten through the surface greenery,
zigzagged trails where
the creature has turned its head
from side to side as
it rasped through the cold dark hours.
Death below ground,
long-mouldered to brittle bones, burials
upon burials through
war and alleged peace,
through epidemics and
poverty, burials back to saxon England,
when singing-men sang
in the little choir school beyond the wall.
There is another death;
the one evident in the corpses left half eaten:
the teal caught on the
pool to the north, its green speculum iridescent
in the filtered light,
the woodcock, its long bill spearing the
lawn
from its fall from
height, decapitated, yet barely touched.
The peregrines have
returned, though no shrill call echoes around the spire today,
and they are absent
from their usual perches on carved foliage and grotesque heads
high on the tower:
they must be away, hunting.
Soon they will rear
their scruffy chicks under the clamouring bells,
give testimony to
resurrected life, as a new generation of predators
takes to the skies.
Mistletoe at St. Savin.
The evening air is still,
after the long, hot day,
deep in central France.
Crash!
The sudden sound from the
poplar by the river,
brings a gaggle of gawpers from
tents and caravans.
Broken limbs and twigs lay
scattered,
midst the bifurcating stems
of mistletoe,
vivid chrome against the grey
furrowed bark,
spangled with glistening
pearly berries.
The mistletoe,
we say,
the mistletoe has brought down the branch.
Maretakken,
I hear the Dutch couple camped next to us declare.
Mistel, mistel,
whisper the new arrivals, the pair from Germany.
Ah, le gui,
agrees la Guardienne, summoned by the fuss:
it seems to us the event has
generated
a lesson in European
vocabularies.
Above, huge clumps still
swamp the trees
that host these uninvited
guests,
draining remnants of life
from dry wood;
the parasite’s success its
eventual undoing,
as both invader and invaded
perish in the end.
Yet this plant was once held
holy, cut only from a sacred grove,
with priestly silver sickle, lowered
in a cloth to avoid
all contact with the earth, since
from the air it came
and so it should remain.
Next day, the township’s men
arrive
with tractor and chainsaws,
and clear the debris,
cart away the tangled remains
of this destructive union:
order is restored, for now,
until some future summer’s eve
when once more the mistletoe
will fall.
The Famine Road.
Weaving round the headland, never
leaving sight of sea, for ever
heaving ocean far below.
Winding road, to mountain
clinging,
blinding spray and rainstorm
stinging,
grinding toil is all they know.
Stones to carry, stones to rake.
Bones are weary, hunger's ache
groans aloud. So many died,
pressed to work by harvest's
blight;
blessed are those who lost the
fight,
rest and warmth and food denied.
Mould and fire destroyed the home:
cold and hungry, forced to roam.
Doled the work, and doled the
meal:
meagre rations, grudging, given,
eager hands by famine driven,
beleaguered men may kill and
steal.
Take the starving from their land,
break their will, destroy their
stand,
shake their faith, and hopes they
knew.
Nearly all will toe the line,
clearly man is not divine.
Dearly bought this priceless
view.
During the Potato
Famine, in Ireland, road building was offered as a "Relief" from
starvation: many people chose rather to emigrate, than to accept the pitiful
dole.
By Tina Negus
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