Poem
Night’s the ground beneath my feet
since I learned to walk with you.
Scented guide with birds and flowers on your breath,
Our competing lifestyles lost us the Australian double
that semester. And couldn’t we then arrange
to do the other, and was the desert that limitless,
and why not say so? You see, griping comes naturally
The ice-cream headache has you seeing double
as Goody Twoshoes calls by your table to arrange
some kind of smooth-talk conference full of limitless
possibilities, lots of cocktails, two naked men and naturally
Much as I loved you in the snow and ice,
Side-slipping down the chute below Spinale –
It’s twenty years now since we saw Madonna
(Di Campiglio, not Ciconne)
And once again that field of neutral light,
Those same few vessels subtly rearranged
Across the surface of a table,
The pots and bottles, vases, with a slight
Apart from those
occasional wrinkled socks
you are aristocratically pallid
'Osip Mandelstam and Rosemary Dobson: A translation', a new poem by Rosemary Dobson
And on my travels I came across
a boy holding his purple heart
in his hands like a broken cup. I touched
the handle – it turned into a bluebird
The Captain’s keen to explore, go deeper,
Take core samples, measure astronomical tilt.
He says the clues are down there and the truth;
Our forebears, numerously well-preserved,
at 86 and 91 they are still together
more or less
and greet me at the door
as if I am the punchline to a joke
they were just recalling