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Sunday, 22 March 2020

Spring Poem

Brent Cotton





Spring Poem



It is spring, my decision, the earth
ferments like rising bread
or refuse, we are burning
last year's weeds, the smoke
flares from the road, the clumped stalks
glow like sluggish phoenixes / it wasn't
only my fault / birdsongs burst from
the feathered pods of their bodies, dandelions
whirl their blades upwards, from beneath
this decaying board a snake
sidewinds, chained hide
smelling of reptile sex / the hens
roll in the dust, squinting with bliss, frogbodies
bloat like bladders, contract, string
the pond with living jelly
eyes, can I be this
ruthless? I plunge
my hands and arms into the dirt,
swim among stones and cutworms,
come up rank as a fox,

restless. Nights, while seedlings
dig near my head

I dream of reconciliations
with those I have hurt
unbearably, we move still
touching over the greening fields, the future
wounds folded like seeds
in our tender fingers, days
I go for vicious walks past the charred
roadbed over the bashed stubble
admiring the view, avoiding
those I have not hurt

yet, apocalypse coiled in my tongue,
it is spring, I am searching
for the word:
finished
finished

so I can begin over
again, some year
I will take this word too far.




Margaret Atwood

So I can begin over again...” It does mean letting things go. Burning, forgiving. Spring is partly saying goodbye to everything dead. Out of the dead rises a new thing. Can we let it be, so there is no weight with us, so we can move and grow? So we can lift up our heads? See new things, step out into new stories? (How many vicious walks have you been on?!)

We may not be ready for it, but it’s Spring.

A new thing.










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