Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
POEMS
FOR SEASONS
For no urgent reason, I present to
you as this week’s “Something Thoughtful” two poems that appear in my
forthcoming collection Mirror World
(Steele Roberts, 2016). Winter is now with us, and even though I write this
after a blissfully sunny and clear Auckland day, I can feel the chill in the
air. So I have decided to present you with two poems dealing with the seasons. “The
Pear Tree” will (I hope) resonate with anyone who has admired the blossoms in
spring, but has simultaneously sniffled through pollen-charged allergies. As
for “Winter Trio”, I hope it (and King
Lear) are self-explanatory.
THE
PEAR TREE
The lesson
never learnt, in seems and is,
taught each
year when she stands
with witches’
claws against the winter skies
beside the
supple, living evergreen,
declaring that
she’s ready for the axe.
Then spring,
uncalled-for, buds. Always
the unexpected
putting-on of gear,
a bridal gown
of petals, white
this week and
papering the earth
before birds
stab her fruit.
An easy lesson,
then, in seems and is,
the seasoned
allegory, life from death
in cycles of
renewal. The dead wood
was hibernating
only, waiting for
the vernal
equinox and nudge of sun.
But seems and is lack seasons, come
in frost or
warmth. She’s living for her kind.
Her springtime
brideship has a price
in pollen-spray
and spores. For the unkind
her living
beauty carries plague.
A fevered,
heavy head, wet nose
and sneezes
from her blossom
freezing
thought and stoking allergy.
She doesn’t die
in winter, doesn’t give
her beauty
freely; is a tree that answers back
WINTER
TRIO
Autumn went
out; winter came in. The cat
hid from the
night rain under the platform
outside our
front door, its green wood dripping,
protesting loud
at her rout from behind
warm armchair
or under mysterious desk.
We lay in the
dark, hearing her trundling
over the tiles,
miaowing at the window
when we
switched on a light in the small hours.
Her fur was
wet, dawn eyes large when we let
her in. “Poor Tom’s a cold!” Our soul outside.
A small
blackbird landed in the guttering,
and slipped and
was trapped, its leg caught in rust,
fidgeting and
crying beyond our grasp.
The cat reached
the bird, bit its head and batted,
making its last
flight dead-weight and gravity.
We scraped the
maimed carcass from the concrete,
feather, bones
and muck, a cat’s unwanted sport,
and made a
shallow grave in sodden soil.
It rained and
dripped. The cat sniffed flowers and weeds
as we worked,
indifferent to little death.
Then the rats,
or mice. Something scampering
behind the
scrim at least in the darkness
when it was
raining, sheltering like we,
an alien
domestic beast, resented
in our dreams
of unsavoury rodents.
The cat, the
rat, the bird, a winter trio
driven by foul
weather to our closed coat
of wood and
tile. We are no benign king
of
mercy-madness, wrapping a wet Fool,
but the fourth
part of forced winter shelter.
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