Clare lights with The Bell and Annie |
Moving On
I do not spend time idly wishing
for things that are now lost:
the love that I've been missing
now belongs locked in the past.
The bird upon the swaying tree
sings a sweet, soft melody,
but it does not keep on tweeting
of things that will never be.
You can never make good cider,
with life's worm-eaten fruit;
wait for the warm glow of summer
and pick from the tree anew.
The stream will keep on flowing,
the waters fast move on;
I will not keep on dreaming
of a life that is clearly gone.
I awoke with memories of uneasy dreams. I was accompanied by a band of my children, attempting to reach the edge of a deep valley. I had been there before many times in previous dreams, but had always approached from the far end, usually having emerged from some tunnel. Now the track took us past a nest of tiny cobras, each erect with flared hood and menacing, and before us was a conveyor belt feeding a furnace that we had to cross. Though silent now, I knew a great lump of coal would soon drop from the chute, and the thing would start up. One of the children started to play with the conveyor belt, and I had to warn him to keep away, least he be caught up in it when it started up.
Ann's new poem too is about moving on. It is as though she read my dreams through that union of mysterious synchronicity that has been with us since we met. She too can smell the smell of decay. The time to move on comes closer now and I must prepare the way.