Acts of remembrance.
Acts of remembrance.
Even sitting at a plastic table
With a flat white
The screech of conversation
All but drowning out the songs of the morning
Cockatoos and Rosellas
Jostling for space
I can remember the need to write a letter.
The act of lifting a pen
Full of Indian ink
Beginning to form the words
The smell of a cigarette
The curl of smoke from a tray
The spill of ash on a white tablecloth
The clink of a bone china cup.
Her silhouette against the sky
Red hair catching the sun
Setting the sky ablaze.
Tending the garden
Cleaning leaves
Pruning the clematis
Tucking her hair
Behind an ear
Absentmindedly.
Unaware of the impact
Her appearance made
The curve of her back
As she sank to her knees
Scooping up a basket
Of weeds
To drop into the composter.
Spending time apart
Wishing we were not.
Together we would send
Postcards from faraway places
They would arrive after we were home.
Gentle were the reminders
When every trip
Was an excursion
It was as mysterious a word
As exotic
And we would write it down
Fit it into the conversation
As if we were imparting
Wisdom for the ages
Whilst sitting cross-legged
At a silver service table
In the restaurant Car
Upon the Orient Express.
When every trip
Was more rightly termed
A European Tour
A suitcase was made of leather,
Handbound.
Portmanteaus were de-rigueur
For the well-to-do’s
What on earth possessed the world?
Backpackers have more fun
The smell of unwashed bodies
Is more common
Than a Sobranie
At a pavement cafe table.
But the need to recall
The moment
A pen scratched a few words
Across an unlined sheet
Of vellum,
The tilt of her head
When she read an old postcard,
Is enough
To warm my heart,
As the coffee cools.