It may be down to the fact that I’m listening to – no: immersed in – Counting Crows a lot, at the moment (a very extended moment that has been absorbing me for many, many days): but there seems to be a preternaturally large number of black birds flecking, piercing, spiralling, twisting and weaving the air, at the moment. (That phrase again.)
“Beautiful writing. Each word pulls you towards the next in effortless momentum. Very much enjoy your work.”
— Mark Peter Beeson
“I love your blog! You write so beautifully.”
— Oliver Ryan
Thursday, 10 December 2020
Thursday, 12 November 2020
The weight of this sad time we must obey…
I watch, and am become like a sparrow
That is alone upon the house-top.
– Psalm 102:7
It may have happened a million times. Or it may have happened just this once. Not that it matters. Not to me. Not really. But to the birds, almost certainly. Preeminently the lone shadow which still sings… – Shakespeare’s “substance of a grief” made manifest.
Wednesday, 7 October 2020
Unfinished sympathy…
Seven tsunamis of grief
In memory of Marie Ward: 21 September 1930 to 30 March 2021
The land is dry
And yet the waves come
Silenced as sun
And high as pain
Soundless to hide
Their beginning
The land is clear
And yet the waves come
Unmade as breath
And torn as faith
Formless to hide
Their fashioning
The land is deep
And yet the waves come
Ever as air
And light as flame
Weightless to hide
Their strengthening
The land is hard
And yet the waves come
Stoppered as wind
And brave as tree
Placeless to hide
Their happening
The land is high
And yet the waves come
Darkened as moon
And bright as night
Guiltless to hide
Their mastering
The land is walled
And yet the waves come
Driven as time
And forced as rain
Ceaseless to fault
Their bettering
The land is dust
And yet the waves come
Ravished as death
And barbed as life
Hopeless to hide
Their ending
Friday, 22 May 2020
Lockdown diary #5:
Enter into his gates with thanksgiving…
To Eric Ward (10 March 1929 to 19 May 2020)
I know what it is to die
But not to know that you are dying –
As the breeze clears the hollow sky
Holding your faint, fading soul and fingers
Brushing my face as gently; as gently as
Odours of sage, marjoram and rosemary
Make hands of deep, supportful, lifelong love –
The draught yet unable to fill the emptiness
quarried sharp within my chest.
I know what it is to mourn
But not quite yet to be mourned –
Eight months of pain between our passings:
Mine resolved and out of mind; yours too soon:
Too soon a hand of sharp chalk shelling the blue –
So I take to bed to be with you: too early,
But peacefully, joint in sleep; mine too early:
Yours eternal; mine all too quick, all too quick;
and much too false, except in others’ hearts.
Such endings then should be writ loudly
Each letter screamed so ever deep and ragged –
New scars fresh pathways free forever to explore
Hard into your new hills as they forever grow:
Smoothing under the boots that took so many
To their better futures: taught so well; so well
That your remembrances now merge with theirs.
Proficiscere anima Christiana.
Proficiscere patrem meum.
Tuesday, 21 April 2020
Lockdown diary #4:
My words fly up, my thoughts remain below…
Where the bee sucks, there suck I:
In a cowslip’s bell I lie;
There I couch when owls do cry.
On the bat’s back I do fly
After summer merrily.
Merrily, merrily shall I live now
Under the blossom that hangs on the bough.
– Shakespeare: The Tempest (V.i.88-94)
As with so much horticultural minutiae, it was Felix – still not yet accustomed to having the run of the garden (or – as he must see it – patrolling ‘his’ domain) – who first spotted the tiny creature, and then alerted me (his unrealized chaperon) to its hovering presence; swiftly (and coincidentally) followed by The Guardian’s consistently high-quality Country diary column. I say “tiny”… – but the “creature” in question has a big name in so many respects: “Bombylius major, the large or dark-edged bee‑fly”. Nevertheless, it is small. Yet another of nature’s brilliant and beautiful works of precision engineering, and perfect, startling, purpose. [Bee-flies are sometimes called “humble-flies”. But never, sadly, “humble-bees”… – an eponym reserved for bumble-bees: who, if their buzz (or hum) is anything to go by, are actually quite assertive!]