Sport 14: Autumn 1995
From a ha-ha to a cemetery
From a ha-ha to a cemetery
for David and Beth
How wise to have this unseen ditch between
Our present basking in spring air and
The end. The lines on lines of beloved books
Or beds of stone that climb the hill
And pause at a vista with a yew
Or obelisk, a cross on the horizon
That’s surely not contrived but by being placed
Draws the eye into an accent and wonderment.
How envious I think I am of this
Holding and focusing your binoculars
When a black dog bounds into view
Or a little party comes, dressed in pale colours
To examine and then surround
A minister with a bible. I hold their stillness
In the glass, hardly breathing. Only the words
Are absent. Not ha-ha obviously but
Beloved, that strange deadened word
That covers like an eiderdown
All failings in a nest of feathers.
No one here is not beloved or missed
And if they rose would be instantly kissed
Like Lazarus by his sisters or set down
To eat and drink as we are on the lawn.
I pass the binoculars back. The group
Breaks up, the dog, unconcerned, bounds
Across beloved, beloved and beloved.