Mother: Nature
I’m stuck
In the nighttime-
In the cracks of my ceiling-
In the yellow corridors of the hospital ward.
The Labyrinth; 13
beds, 12
inhabitants.
It’s an enigma.
I couldn’t hold her hand.
She was Life-size plasticine,
Or polystyrene,
Or plaster;
it could be a childhood dream
were it not for the grammar.
Lifeless-size;
You forget that Skin isn’t Skin if it’s cold.
Mother taught me that time is not a healer; it grows.
The stench of amnesia on a drip,
veins of grass. Ants slip
between the seams
of sheltering leaves
that fell last autumn.
I have my own garden now. Pea shoots and blueberries
and Fruit for the worms.
I wouldn’t look at her eyelids;
I would tell her about the trees and build my own eden
for Her roots. I would see them
delving below the garden bed
Circulating tube lines,
searching deeper and further for any promised land.
There’s not enough space in the dirt-
who took it all?
London became an empty carcass:
a coffin,
coughing Business,
suits, and top hats.
Ode to London-
I was born in an empty city.
The trees are hollow,
The bark is a guise.
You don’t notice the skip in the record
until you have something to compare it to.
The way the tube halts just before Brixton-
A seasonal vaccine-
Mum and Machine- screeches to a stop.
The routine of red signals for a dozen more passengers going underground.
I wonder if they saw Persephone in the flashes of electrics
Or Pomegranate in the tracks?
It’s so loud now
I can hear the nutrients
Spinning
in the air. Proteins,
before My eyes,
and yet
I see Nothing.