Friday, 20 March 2026

Five Poems by Rose Mary Boehm

 






After My ‘Friend’ Bitched About the New Home

I Inherited from Auntie

 

I understand your vitriol, dear friend.

But just because I have the beams you coveted,

the bougainvillea you always wanted

as well as the books you borrowed and generally

‘forgot’ to give back, don’t look so green.

Green does not become you.

As you well know, I collected art

over time, whenever I had saved enough

to give myself a gift.

Do you remember the small Mary Fedden

we found together in Camden Lock Market?

I now happen to have the money to frame them,

I now have the walls to hang them.

 

Soon we’ll be having very cold beers on my porch—

think of droplets slowly rolling from the cold glass—

under the red and white striped awning

to protect us from the fierce Spanish sun,

dip into the pool, sharing the fruits

of this unexpected windfall.

I am not sorry that I won’t see you there.

 

There is so much more to friendship

than a house. Remember when you seemed

happy in my little attic and the two blue, single

beds in the alcoves, the small stove

in the entrance, a sink by the front door?

You used to come to take a ‘holiday from marriage’,

and, even then, you envied me.


 

Four Mutts Having 3,000 Square Meters of Freedom

 

And they can’t keep still.

Slobbering, open mouthed, easy of limb,

they run. And then they run—

from peach tree to apple tree, from wire fence

to vines, from honeysuckle to willow,

from pool to garden shed.

And then the run some more.

And then they come for approval,

for a hug, for a bone, for a bowl,

for a moment of contemplation,

before they run.

Again.

 

Donner, Gustavo, and Maxi:

a brown, a grey, and a black wooosh,

their mouths open, showing what they could do

if they wanted to, their tails steering,

they don’t know where they are expected

to be in such a hurry.

 

Only Laika, the German Shepherd, can’t quite

keep up anymore with the young hooligans.

She’s an elderly lady of distinction, of arthritis,

of sleeping under the honeysuckle hedge on icy ground.

She was homeless until she found us,

doesn’t know what to do with a bed.

 

But we saw her once, ambling with an exotic friend

through the fields with a handsome,

sexy, gorgeous fox.

 

Never underrate old ladies.


 

Storm Alert in London

 

The Radio: Severe thunderstorms will occur within 10 km of any point.

 

Whatever that means.

Still, we were warned.

It didn’t come suddenly, but we didn’t believe.

It had never happened before.

Somewhere in the Caribbean perhaps,

not to us.

 

It had been raining for days.

When the storm broke,

the oldest, most solid chestnut trees

in Hyde Park were pulled from the wet ground

like matchsticks, roots helplessly pointing

to the black sky.

They died in a dirty-green mass grave.

We saw it all on TV before the power went.

 

At the front of our house the cherry tree

was stopped by the streetlight, or the tree

would have entered our bedroom windows

like an old-fashioned battering ram.

 

At the back the drains were overflowing,

and unmentionables rushed as in a small river

down the garden path towards the yet

untamed clump of Japanese knotweed.

 

When we finally raised our heads,

stepped out of our door,

took in the damage,

we looked at each other, and we knew

that the havoc wreaked

was not confined to outdoors.


 

The gloves

 

Elske asked me to go with her. To Jersey,

the Channel haven for dirty money.

I liked the idea.

 

We stayed with aristocrats she knows,

on their estate. A little run down but still imposing.

The lady of the manor told how Charles I

took refuge there trying not to lose his head.

The king and his entourage almost lost

them the estate drinking, eating, and gambling.

 

After depositing her constant companion,

the wine bottle, safely on the mantel—

an operation not without its difficulty—

Lady Whatsits opened a small mahogany box

and pushed it into my hands. Want to try these?

Charles left them here.

 

The gloves fit perfectly.

The silver-studded gauntlet falling

over my hands, I felt the descending weight

of almost 400 years. The royal peacock

paraded near the garden wall, its toes turned

inwards, made a fan and shrugged.


 

You rang, Sir? 

 

Boris Karloff. Face hewn from hard wood, twinkle hidden

behind sunken eyes. Monsters live in me, hunch

behind every pillar, waiting in every dark corner.

I hope that love does, too, like Beauty and the Beast.

 

We drive through the part of eastern Europe where

woods belong to elves and the little people. Where evil queens

find apples to poison beautiful princesses, where

Jorinde is enslaved by the wicked witch, where

Hänsel und Gretel wander still.

 

Wolves and bears. Of course. The car eats black asphalt. In the

headlights grey motes, on the windscreen splat insects.

No yellow lines. No streetlights. No one else out in this dark night.

Only rain. Only blackness as the kilometers rush underneath.

I hear the trees’ warning, feel them closing in.

 

Orange lights.

Military men.

The border post.

I remember another border.

another night. Safety catches

clicking in quick succession.

 

The bleak monster is a little man

in a great coat, collar up.

He wields

a red stamp.

"Next…"






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