Thursday, August 24, 2017

Four poems for Norman by Brian Walter

Presences

Your monkey troop clambers
in the winter magnolia – chuckling
and chirping and reaching for buds,

scampering and riding
high the bending branches
like boys in a Frost poem.

And in the lit morning,
from the next house, the strains
of Pianoman finger the air.

These are the sounds you hear
in a poet’s garden, he having left
this while, and roving out west. 

29th July 2017
  
Seer

On an autumn day in Africa
you came from your mountain

to tell of a face you saw
in your almond tree.  Nothing

you say could alarm me: I trust
your eyes and mind: ancestors

have been kind enough to call
on you.  Myths are making you

their own.  When you left, humbly
I plucked for my autumn vase

a living twig of wild olive,
the last sprig of almond

from my tree, and one bronze
chrysanthemum, the first

this season.  Autumn: you see past
foliage to the very word of tree. 

from Tracks

Gaga footbridge

                   Alice days, for Norman Morrissey

Time was the skies opened,
and we on a motorbike
going home via Chitibunga’s bottle store:
but the dip of the Gaga was flooded,
so we ducked off right, and over
the footbridge, undaunted and soaking.

After our transaction, kindly and warm ‒
do you know the big guy was later killed
by robbers, right at his till, and he so hardy
and big-boned ‒ you held our two packets
of beer, one in each hand, on the pillion,

balancing, arms dependent. Times like these,
I remember the first beer, standing now
in dry clothes ‒ watching the downpour hitting
at everything, water washing in gushes
where we never thought water would flow ‒

and laughing,

life balanced in your safe hands,
motorcycle passenger,
over the straight and narrow footbridge.
  
from Poems Packed for Travel

Ngqika’s Kop 

A smoke haze rises from far-off forests
this weekend, while we work about the house,
or watch patches of cricket on TV.  “Pine-forest fire,
in the hills,” we agree, and consider
how the forecast cold front, that now chills
the test in Cape Town, will soon quench this blaze.                         

But tonight flames still crackle in the dark,
crowning the mountains, right up where the stars
hold the sky.  And then ― this Monday morning ―
snow.  That African hill stands majestic,
wears white Ethiopian skirts, and appears so brave
and blessed that all looks well with the world. 

Watching from our lowlands, we did not know
that you’d spent the holidays fire-fighting,
beating raging flames from neighbour houses,
smoke-choked and seared; and how your team
of volunteers rushed to ever moving
crisis-points, calling details and command;                                           
               
how, late that Sunday night, so many of you,
hearing sounds of peaceful susurration,
left exhausted houses to stand outside,
calm in the dousing rain that at last fell,
then crept indoors to sleep; and how your dreams
coalesced collectively into snow.

from Mousebirds

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Events

Musing,
dozing, wrapped in a blanket,
the fire alive as a serpent’s tongue

I’m lost
in the events
amidst the embers.

9.6.2017

Snake

All day
I’ve been the snake of the medicine cards:
weaving over the sands of my mind,

thoughts coruscations I slide across
and leave
along the way.

10.6.2017

Matter

My legs folded,
I went down on my knees
before the filthy gutter

– but kind folk came,
got me back on my feet,
steadied me,

made
the experience
matter.

19.6.2017

No matter

Where can we write:
tissues of visions
that melt into one another
no matter how one withers.

17.7.2017 (This was Norman’s penultimate poem)


Norman Morrissey

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Best drier

The best drier
of tears
is the wind.

23.7.2017

Still calls

I put your underpants
back in the drawer,
your t-shirt into the cupboard.

A time will come
to lose
those rituals

but for now
the Wood owl
still calls.

25.7.2017

In each other

At our usual
picnic spot
on the R63

I stop
to note my gladness
at these places

across
the country
we shared.

We were
without wanting
to be

a restless pair
forced to travel
these roads

– never really
at home
except

in
each
other.

16.8.2017

Silke Heiss