
What’s
Left
(for Peter Hennessy)
I used
to wait for the flowers,
my pleasure reposed on them.
Now I like plants
before they get to the blossom.
Leafy ones – foxgloves, comfrey, delphiniums
–
fleshy tiers of strong leaves pushing up
into air grown daily lighter
and more sheened
with bright dust like the eyeshadow
that tall young woman
in the bookshop wears,
its shimmer and crumble on her white
lids.
The washing sways on the line, the sparrows pull
at the
heaps of drying weeds that I’ve left around.
Perhaps this is middle
age. Untidy, unfinished,
knowing there’ll never be time now to
finish,
liking the plants – their strong lives –
not caring about flowers,
sitting in weeds
to write things down, look at things,
watching the sway
of shirts on the line,
the cloth filtering light.
I know more or
less
how to live through my life now.
But I want to know how to live
what’s left
with my eyes open and my hands open;
I want to stand at the
door in the rain
listening, sniffing, gaping.
Fearful and joyous,
like
an idiot before God.
~ Kerrie Hardie ~
(Cry for the Hot
Belly)
(left button to play, right button
to save)