poem about two love affairs going wrong. |
day died at four o'clock that winter walk in the country sun's blood flooding the sky with arctic power trees wind-scattered birds shocked into rabbit holes four of us trod the stubble frost exhaling ice-sharp meadow scaling the earth alight in winter's fire broad in his duffel coat and gumboots he strode easily, bred on the land. Close she shiverered wind-drugged and remote, all her warmth curled in his gloved hand. Wilderness held them together. At home stumbling apart marriage had never synchronized their footsteps from the start. Down the empty railway track he laughed and kissed her mouth probing deep wrong. Only in this dream where seagulls wheel about the plough did they belong the two boys led on, turning as they talked their handsome bearded faces swinging arms, four slim legs walk as one to quicken to the rhythm of the night in whispered secrets their lonely house under the moon held months of tenderness but it would soon be lost in the promiscuous city. His lover's tears, a vengeful suicide last pulsing of the blood-red wound, no more his lover's pity we knew nothing of the other couple's pain but sunset brought us close wrapping friendship in unspoken thoughts, sat on the castle ruins, Fotheringhay, deep in the fen where mary stuart screamed and screamed unheard seeing the block the long stare of a virgin queen and as a day slid down the universe the towering windows of the chapel blazed with endless suns and groups of people gazed |