As we go

Contact the poet: mwambani@hotmail.com


Wednesday 3 October 2012

Day Dream


To dream was to survive.
In my dream, which I could initiate
at will, I’m tending a smoking pile
of damp leaves. It is a dark,
late Autumn afternoon, and a fine drizzle
covers my hair with a delicate lace.

Now I’m entering a friendly
kitchen. No sound, save a low
womb-like hum, perhaps the aga,
and a girl with a wistful smile
coming towards me
in the warm light and drying
my face with a towel.

Twenty five years on, as I
mowed the lawn in the rain,
trying to unstitch a persistent
melancholy, you came out
and placed a coat over my shoulders.
And I knew I’d survived, and that
dreams really did come true.


John H Davies
29th VIII 2010 

Rethinking incarceration


Send me back to gaol.
I’ll forget about the noise.
Give me two bowls of rice
and a trim figure, any day.

Lock me up again,
I won’t complain
of when I might be freed.
For now I see a freedom

hidden in that captivity.
No fears about recession.
The only crunch, the crunch
of cockroach underfoot.

Tomorrow I’ll wake
without the thought of how
I’ll pay the mortgage, and
this evening someone else

can remember to lock up
and switch out the lights
as the world and I spin on
in selective oblivion.



9th IX 2010
John H Davies

Bee hives


On a breezy day
We diffidently
Climbed the hill
On top of which
Stood forlorn
The remnants of a cottage.

“Let’s go inside!”
The youngest cried
And I, more cautious
Eyed the broken roof
And grown-up practicality
Delayed the chance
That we might further go.

But ever closer drawn
We carefully trod
The scores of guardian nettles
Where once there was a lawn
And beat a wary path
Towards the door.

And as we neared
I thought I heard
A low but steady hum
Of which the others weren’t aware
Reassuring, yet of danger it forebode
And far we were from any road.

Once within the crumbling walls
The humming grew
And looking through
A broken window
To a hidden yard the other side
We spied a dozen hives
Absorbed in timeless industry.

The noise we now all recognised
And rooted to the spot
With studied nonchalance
We each looked inward on our fear
Ignorant of the ways of bees
Yet held firm by the wonder
Of this ancient sight and sound:
Watchers from another world. 

Without a word
We left. No debate
And naught to expiate.
Happy to have happened
On that secret place
Where we’ll return one day.

10th XI 2007

Irene


Irene didn't know he wasn't
her real father
until she needed the birth certificate
for her first job.
Her mother explained as they walked to the mill:
He wasn't my real dad…
but he was a good man.

They left the kids at home
on Saturday nights with three pairs of socks
on the kitchen table, and a note:
‘This pair want washing
and this pair want darning
and this pair want washing and darning.’

They used to call her the Little Mother
she overheard years later
in the queue at the grocers.

She said it felt she was never wanted,
but always needed, and now at 86
she was neither wanted nor needed…
but he was a good man.

9th XII 2009

Gravitas


Three courses and a bottle of wine
for a tenner. She felt moved to text
her friend, while trying to decide
whether it was Tenerife next year

or stay at home and economise.
So many decisions. Contract or
pay-as-you-go? No time to lose.
Each spinning plate easily replaced,

they’re only cheap. Like the 40”
flat screen magic box that filled
the empty spaces and made her happy.
“It makes me happy.” Checking for lumps

when no-one was looking, she felt plain
despite the shiny shoes. Appearances
were important, and her line manager
pushed her just too far last week,

her only solace the knowledge
that she would brood, and brood,
and brood, and many years later
she’ll complain how the neighbour

planted a tree that obscured the view
from the front room. She couldn't even
watch the children coming home
from school. The highlight of her day.


John H Davies
28th VIII 2010 

Had you come home


What would you have found
Had you come home?
Had providence preserved the vital germ
That had begun to grow.

Perhaps you see us now
From your quiet resting place
Among the countless thousands
With whom you share your fate
In timeless grace.

Could you accept without a bitter pang
The passing of the old ways?
As you walk the lane at eventide
And reach the gate
“Cooo-ee!”

Would you not hate
The gradual disappearance
Of those things you loved?
Woods of aspen, beech and yew
And beds of fragrant herbs with ancient names,
A horse and cart; the team and plough;
The smithy; inn and woodman’s cot;
The nightingale, skylark and curlew.
.

These things are mostly gone.
No longer could you walk
For twenty miles in quiet roads unspoiled,
With only hedgerow gifts
To interrupt your leisured gait.

It’s all too late.
Only your beloved names remain
Echoes of those golden times
Captured in the legacy you left behind.
For we can hear you still
“Cooo-ee!” though fainter now
And like the passing age
Gone, but not forgotten.

(In memorandum E.T.)
13th XI 2007 

Her smile


She warms the moment with her smile.
Barely as I knock upon the door
It opens wide,
And wider still her countenance
With eyes that shine a mixture
Of both welcome and surprise,
Envelopes me and gently bears
My anxious heart within.

Gentler still, her soft embrace
Discovers that our bodies thus
Were fashioned eons hence
By nature’s knowing wit,
Whereby our union produced a perfect fit.

She warms the moment with her smile,
When parting I must fly
The safety of her arms and patiently abide
Till we can meet again
Upon the next returning tide.

25th II 2006

Space


This day I failed again.
The one I love has fled in angry pain.
Her silence I mistook.
For in her hour of need, she seemed to need me not.

If I but knew my presence there alone,
Devoid of talk or touch
And unacknowledged for a while,
Was all she craved.

In time I’ll learn.
And in my heart I hope
That patience might allow a chance
For me to demonstrate my love
In nothing more than silence,
And a forward glance.

8th VIII 2004

The Pharmacy


“A bottle of eye drops please – chloramphenicol,
my wife (she’s a nurse) asked me to collect it for her,
she’s doing an extra shift today, and Sunday too,
to make ends meet.”
“One moment sir, I’ll have to ask the pharmacist.”
In retrospect, I think she already knew.
“So sorry sir, the pharmacist” (who’s hair I could just see
above the low partition) says the patient must attend.”

As I stormed off I realised
my silent rage was with myself.
Why didn’t I stay and say something clever like:
But they’re only eye drops –
my wife can’t get in, that’s why I’m here.
She’s quadriplegic (she’s not)
can’t you take my word – or hers?
She’s a nurse for God’s sake!

Instead I said:
“I’m leaving the country.”
I didn’t change anything.

13th XII 2009

Unwelcome news


It was an innocent enough question
and you’d been waiting for it,
rehearsing the answer. And when it came
you paused, and in that moment
I knew everything. Your look
told me everything you hoped to hide.

How she took it on the chin
while you floundered, considered,
resolved to reset the clock from this
infinite moment with each borrowed breath
a returning wave.



John H Davies
23rd August 2010 

You were not here


You were not here
When I came home.
You had not phoned
To say your plans had changed,
Or you’d be late.

At once I feared the worst,
And for a moment
Tempted fate to show me
How I’d feel if something terrible had passed.
Perhaps a crash: The phone would ring
“I’m sorry sir – she didn’t feel a thing.”

And for some minutes
I put it from my mind,
And quelled a guilty feeling
Only still to find my thoughts
Returning to that morbid place...

Until your radiant face
Alighting at our door
“Hello my love, I called in
“At the grocery store.
“Is everything OK?”
“Oh yes,” I said
“I’ve had a lovely day.”

15th X 2008 

The Squirrel


Two boys running through a wood
trampling late autumn leaves
giving chase to a grey squirrel
descended from a tree
and now within tantalizing reach.

The leader hurdles a fallen bough
and lands amidst a briar
scratching bare knees,
unwieldy wellingtons struggling
to maintain traction on the muddy path.

Running again
the squirrel just ahead,
vision narrowing and a focused rush of sound
between his ears, his sweaty hand
closes on the rodent’s tail.

In this unexpected moment of triumph
the despairing animal turns,
lets out a high pitched scream
and fixes the boy with an indignant look.

At once he loosens his grip
and watches, ashamed, as the squirrel
scurries to the safety of a nearby tree.
Ashamed, because his feelings are unprepared
for this moment.

Years later, he would remember that look.
That sound. In a far off land, in a different wood.
As he slipped the safety catch
and took the first pressure on the trigger.



22nd XII 2009