Tuesday 6 April 2010

Daybreak

Fields are fresh as frozen peas 
in the marrow-cracking cold 
of morning, hiding inevitable  
beyond the night, with its 
phantoms, and legends and
foxes trotting the perimeter 
of the coup;
yellow teeth, carrion breath
rough brush, persecuted dog 
under the Hawthorn. 

We creatures survive the night
of a harshly withheld Spring;
the longed for kiss, 
with its moist life-giving warmth,
and in the weak light 
of this daybreak, we break 
for the edges of our ancient 
cultivated space, 
holding on for dear life
reaching in our game of 
Blind man’s bluff, for hands 
that even in this cold, 
and in this light, like curdled milk,
might guide us towards something 
fruitful; the nourishment, the eternal 
drumbeat, chasing spooks from 
impenetrable thickets of yew,
making new light of what until now 
appeared to be a terrifying fortress
on an unforgiving hill, 
but which suddenly looks like home, 
with the first fires of morning
sending woodsmoke up 
in an insistent gesturing wave.

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