Pyrford Church
by nickb
Posted: Saturday, March 27, 2021 Word Count: 218 Summary: A little place in Surrey where my Mum is, and where I was christened |
Some days I reincarnate you,
the long dead, tethered to this place
by the dial of the bell tower roof.
I imagine you walking amongst the grass
that grapples old headstones,
or the dry pathways; your steps echo
like the spatter of heavy rain.
I am tongue tied by a tumult of words.
This should be a kind place, but we are detached
like the winding road that separates
church from yard. Along its incline,
perspective always gathers to a blind point.
And really, what would I say?
I could tell you of the children perhaps,
how this one or that had done well,
their loves and ambitions; but I feel
you would be listening to the sky.
Our words would meander like dust
in a shaft of sun, never meeting,
but falling like sediment, inexorable,
a fine film burying an age gone by.
There is a sturdy pathos in the names
marked out in sunlit lichen.
Time gives subtle kicks. My memories
degrade like rust, so I look for you
amongst the flocks of flowers left by the lost
and the half-kept borders;
it is remarkable what the eye believes.
A glimpse of you would help me through this;
better still, sit with me and listen
to the blackbird in the undergrowth,
shaking melancholy off the leaves.
the long dead, tethered to this place
by the dial of the bell tower roof.
I imagine you walking amongst the grass
that grapples old headstones,
or the dry pathways; your steps echo
like the spatter of heavy rain.
I am tongue tied by a tumult of words.
This should be a kind place, but we are detached
like the winding road that separates
church from yard. Along its incline,
perspective always gathers to a blind point.
And really, what would I say?
I could tell you of the children perhaps,
how this one or that had done well,
their loves and ambitions; but I feel
you would be listening to the sky.
Our words would meander like dust
in a shaft of sun, never meeting,
but falling like sediment, inexorable,
a fine film burying an age gone by.
There is a sturdy pathos in the names
marked out in sunlit lichen.
Time gives subtle kicks. My memories
degrade like rust, so I look for you
amongst the flocks of flowers left by the lost
and the half-kept borders;
it is remarkable what the eye believes.
A glimpse of you would help me through this;
better still, sit with me and listen
to the blackbird in the undergrowth,
shaking melancholy off the leaves.