Tuesday, 5 May 2020

It's May Day once more


It’s May Day once more
But no Morris dancing at dawn
Nor Mummers plays making merry
Around the town, throughout the day.
Last night, for once, for me
There was no late night
Drinking in the Woodman or the Royal Oak
Nor camping out in the woods
A stride away from the Giant
Astride his ancestral home on the hill
No gathering of morning-after mates
With bleary-eyed dawn choruses of
I like to rise when the sun, she rises.

Yet still we rise
My daughter and I
As the sun she rises
To climb the hill behind our house
Ready to greet the first summer’s day.
But the clouds are grey, and
It’s dark and dismal on the horizon
Where Eggardon Hill sits, brooding.
So we too sit, quietly
On a wooden stile near the Warren
More like evening mourners
Than May Day morn-ers
Drinking tea: me
And she: crunching on a Kit-kat.

Then there’s a break
In the clouds: a dazzle of dawn-light
Unexpectedly bright and golden
Undershot with pigments of pink
Our eyes are glittering
Our minds skittering, with sudden jolts of joy
It’s so special, she said, and I’m glad
You got out me of bed.

Whilst she was in bed
Last night, I was in Sadness Copse
A corpse of a wood, hanging on
To the side of Hyde Hill
An easily-reached refuge 
In difficult times
A place of least resistance
Amongst bracken and brambles
Nettles and pine-needles
And, strangely
A lone, long-stemmed cowslip.
Amidst surround-sound birdsong
I thought I heard a nightingale, calling
In the hawthorns and hazel bushes
Or perhaps, just the ghost of one I heard
This time, last year
In another place.

On the other side
Beyond the canopy of trees
In the shimmer of moon-shine
A blanket of bluebells is
Laid out across the grassy slope.
In the growing gloaming
They become luminous, blue-minous
Like little lanterns ignited by moonlight.
I linger a little longer
And it’s midnight before I’m home
Where in the blinking of two eyes
I’m waking my daughter, before dawn
And it’s May Day once more...


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