Monday 30 December 2013

Les Nymphéas – Tree Reflections



Les Nymphéas – Tree Reflections
 



He sits in a wicker chair, gazing at trees,
straw hat, old suit, patrician beard,
cigarette held in limp fingers: Claude Monet.

Our cessation is not sudden. Like stars
across the black dome of a sky, one by one,
flickering, unnoticed, into oblivion,
senses lose their clarity. Seeing is all,

the sensual beauty of being. Dying eyes
blur what memory tells, what paint recalls.      

Giverny, when daylight and darkness
share a moment of equilibrium;
lake mirrors last hints of brightness
in the imagined sky. Shadow of willow,
trunk and whispy branches, shimmer
against blues of echoed, vanishing light.

Yet rose pink, palest white, green, luminous,
lilies, floating spirits, gently drift
across the blackness, suspended,
forever, against impending night.



Rain on a carriage window



Rain on a carriage window

The train has stopped.  Beyond a barrier of glass
grey fields; by the track a broken fence,
ditch, reeds, dark scrub of bramble.
Towards the horizon tall trees, wires, towers,
denote a nameless town.

We wait, watching the droplets of rain,
tadpoles of light, that sliver, quiver,
coalesce, then slip to oblivion.

Somewhere at the front of this train, a locomotive
hisses or growls, awaiting a signal
for the main line, or maybe the branch
- we are no longer sure.

Time is here suspended. Our way defined
by tracks untravelled, a route unknown.

Only raindrops, quick, elusive as thought,
gently tease at memory.



Dune Fox



DUNE FOX

High dunes, reed-spiked, hush surf’s roar.
Wind whipped, we stop, dismount,
leave bikes by the Fietspad.  She is there,
small, sharp-eared, rust brown. Eyes meet;

Hers dark pools. She pauses, pleads, pads to where
We rustle for biscuit.  She eats, quick, as if to say
Is it not better so to busk than tear
The guts from a quivering, wide-eyed prey?

She plays an old game. Wolves, wild dogs, gave up
savage freedoms for table scraps, stale meat,
their masters’ whistle and crack of whip.
obsequies of obligation, perfectly met.

Fox in the blowing sand, we also come,
word-tamed to beg a stranger’s crumb.



 The title poem of Colin Speakman's 2011 collection - available on Amazon £3 or order direct from
colinspeakman.tfl@blueyonder.co.uk - state address and invoice will be included (post free)