Tag: Lorely Forrester poet

  • Poem: September is Here

    September is Here

    and I want to feel the tingle
    of autumn over the horizon.
    The palette of skies, laying themselves
    nightly before my eyes like Turkish
    carpets in the souks of Istanbul.
    I want to anticipate the nuanced change
    of the leaves, delicate as if the maestro
    himself draws them into the rising
    crescendo of the orchestra – slowly,
    softly, instrument by instrument,
    tree by tree, colour by colour
    until the cymbals clash and the double
    basses vibrate their music through
    the woods and lanes.

    I want to watch the swallows gather
    on the telephone wires, line upon
    line, their eyes on horizons I cannot
    even imagine; waiting for the wind
    to call them, the stars to set their orbit
    across the world.
    I want to see the berries fall
    ripe and rotten into the hollows of
    the hedge, so unseen creatures
    can have their bacchanal,
    their last fling of the  season, then
    reel home through the undergrowth
    replete and tipsy, to sleep the winter away.

    I want to walk to the shore and hear
    the waves rising up in anger,
    beating back the beaches,
    sucking up the stones and hurling
    them at the cliffs in fits of
    equinoctial rage.

    Most of all, I just want to feel
    vibrancy, not deal with autumn playing
    fast and loose – doling out fitful sun,
    welters of drab rain; gales that blow
    and pause and then roar in again, battering
    my garden of deceased flowers and sad
    stalks bent double with despair,
    rotting where they fall. And all
    in light that barely lifts its head,
    light that is just a brief apology
    for being short and low and hesitant;
    no longer flaring with summer’s lusty
    fervour – breaking in and waking me
    at 4am just to whisper sweet nothings
    through the chink in the curtains.

    I want something other than
    the torpor of half-arsed endings.
    What happened to mellow fruitfulness?
    Give me liquid golden light that makes me
    look up, look out; something to cradle
    in my mind through winter. Give me
    that wild transition I know this season
    keeps secreted up its sleeves, to
    compensate for all the untold things
    summer always snatches as she leaves,
    like a jilted lover.
    So autumn, please, no fickle
    promises of crisp, cold days that don’t
    materialise. Step up; pull your finger out –
    go French – Italian – go Portuguese;
    bring on the colours and the lights,
    run your hit show again. You can do it.
    Don’t tease, don’t cheat by sneaking limply
    past, skulking like a thief between the hot
    dog days and winter’s sharp retreat.

  • Poem: ‘If I Could Only’

    If I Could Only

    I dream of roses blooming in the sky,
    of boys with guns, of body parts slung
    over broken toys in some unholy rite.
    And through mind-searing noise, I hear
    the  wail of mothers keening for their young.
    I dream of hell.

    But when dawn breaks,
    I wake to find that, silently,
    a veil of snow has fallen in the night.
    No severed limbs,
    no sightless, disembodied faces.
    Just snow.
    Its cooling calm fills all the small, slight
    spaces where, yesterday, deep shadows
    seized the waning light.

    No bombs. No blood.
    Here every twig is dressed in vestal white;
    and even while the cold-eyed, brooding
    dawn still dawdles into day, the sky is bright
    with snow, caught by its primal purity –
    the indrawn hush.
    This lustrous, arcane alchemy:
    the mint-ness of a clean-wiped slate.
    It seems a consecration, soft as
    the laying on of hands. It bears the grace
    of prayer – an urgent dream for respite
    everywhere.

    If I could only catch it up, reach out
    and gather in this white of new-washed
    sheets, flung over fields and trees;
    garner it in, then loose it on the scorching,
    hope-burned world. Stifle the fires and guns,
    the screaming drones. Re-write the
    countless stolen, rubbled lives.

    If I could only soothe this quenching
    silence over all the weeping and the
    wounds; make real this gift of new
    beginning. Of absolution.
    This unflawed state of grace.
    If I could only.

    Feature Image: Francesco Goya, Y son fieras (And they are fierce or And they fight like wild beasts), c. 1810.