
Goldfinch


Sitting with a cup of tea a cigarette and the morning paper
Reading the personal stories of survivors of the bombings
As I read I find the newsprint has blurred
I remove my glasses to see if they need cleaning
They do not! I wipe the tears from my eyes and continue
I’m sure I am not the only one that shed a tear for the innocent today
For the world our daily survival is being controlled by a vicious mob
Trying to enslave use with the chains of fear
The nice old man walked from one room to the next then back again
Carrying a book he would sit for a minute then get up and walk again
He had years in the care home wandering from room to room
On a never ending search for contentment that could never be found
I told him of a book I had read, and gave it to him
He thanked me kindly and said he would give it a try
He carried it from room to room in favour of his previous one
Weeks later I asked, how is the book? He sadly replied I can no longer read as I cannot remember the previous page
As the weeks went by he stopped carrying books from room to room
He would tell me of his life and his departed wife, long term memory intact
A gentle dignified man brought low by short term memory failure
Every day when I asked him how he was he would reply I don’t know, I don’t know why I’m still here I don’t want to be here anymore
One day he got his wish I went in and he wasn’t there
Hopefully he found the peace and contentment he searched for, for so long
As the summer days get shorter
Autumn’s presence slowly gets stronger
The leaves begin to fall on my green and well-kept lawn
The blackberries in the hedgerows swell and burst within my mouth
A taste that takes me back to my unfettered childhood
Back to a time when almost everything was good
Back to a time when body and mind were strong
When my judgement may have been wrong, but I believed I could right all wrongs
I would share my dad’s collected field mushrooms fried on Sunday mornings
Then be sick, just too rich cooked in butter they made me ill
Next Sunday I would eat them again same result some enjoyment then I was ill
I must have been a persistent little bastard, I still love mushrooms they no longer make me ill
Walking into the kitchen and the smell of raspberry jam being made
Mum made gooseberry, blackberry, strawberry and blackcurrant
All of these smells remind me of an untroubled childhood
Come on autumn bring your harvest to mind, even the smell of my dad’s pickled shallots is a memory sublime
Our lounge smelled of apples from our orchard
Brown skinned russets no fancy pink ladies
The plums we ate as they became ripe, damsons and a yellow one I can’t remember its name
Potatoes and onions from veg plot with rabbit my dad shot
Herrings from my uncle crown, caught with his own gnarled hands and nets
I remember all this as the autumn mists descend like an old lost friend

Sadly it is true
On the salt marsh the wading birds are tweeting in the dark
As the mist rolls in from the sea and up the creek it is creeping
Engulfing all before it in its cold grey grip
It moves slowly over the water and crawls across the marshes
The temperature drops as if the dead have cast off their shackles
The dogs in their kennels shiver and raise their hackles
Silence descends on the land as it slips into its cold grey grip
It seeps into gardens and under ill-fitting doors
It puts its droplets on the trees and grasses
And when it freezes the landscape will be covered in ice jewels
They glitter in the new days sun
The mist that makes folk fearful has left a gift to be enjoyed
Mum Dad I have something to tell you
No I’m not gay and I haven’t lost my job
I ere were going to have a baby
A glazed stare mouth open as if to speak
What how when, you know what and how but not when
Why the embarrassed conversation between parent and child
Why the embarrassment at the start of this conversation
Is it the confirmation of the act conception?
Or is it the concept of your child as parent
The image of grandparent flashes through your mind
You in a cardigan smelling of cigarettes and lavender
Your grandchild smelling of Johnson’s and sick
The weeks go by starting with morning sickness
Then that pregnancy glow of wellbeing
Turning into enormity and wanting it to be over
On the day the baby chooses it bursts out into the world
Thank god it won’t remember the carnage it has caused
The stretch marks the tears and tears
Out into the world believing it is god
A blessing to its family to be worshiped from above
Now the family has to teach this god that they are a lesser deity
As the sun sets on today we look to tomorrow and lockdown again
Restrictions on our lives no meeting with friends no lunches out
Work and home, walking the dogs,gardening when the rain stops
At least it is only for a month we hope then we will be let out again
We need a vaccine soon or we will all be stark staring mad
Lets hope it saves lots of lives