Sitting alone in the garden
Sitting alone in the garden
At midnight
Counting stars instead of sheep
The smell of jasmine in the air
The hum of electricity
From a coming storm
As loud as a rolling sea
Waves crashing onto the shore
Breaking against chalk-white cliffs
A hundred feet below
The moon, an eye into another world.
Further in town, streetwalkers hail cars
Travelling slow enough to crawl
There is so much loneliness
In hello
When the words are as hollow
As the eyes of poor boys
In alleyways swapping favours
For pennies
Watched over by fat rats and lazy cats.
Everything becomes
Romantically entangled
In the minds of hormonal adolescents
Whilst pre-pubescent children sleep
In soft beds
Beneath painted stars and rainbows
The whisper of lovers
Is never overheard
Until the record stops.
He never waits for sleep to come
But gathers up his bits and pieces
Specs, a dry mug, a crystal glass
And an empty bottle that once held the Macallan,
Comfort food.
An old paperback novel by Emile Zola
He had always meant to read
Lay on the table,
The cover faded in the sun
The title Germinal is barely legible
The irony of such casual naturalism
Not lost in translation
The sweep of the landscape slowly
Becoming visible as the sky lifts
The storm waits in the wings
Perhaps it will make an entrance before the day is over
He waits for the badger to cross the lawn
Its night time excursion
Almost done,
Before he moves.
It is a nightly visitation
And not one he has shared
With the local farmers
A bloodthirsty bunch
As wild as any western
After a couple of pints of scrumpy.
The wise owl nods in appreciation
And stifles a hoot of derision
As the man stands stiffly
They are old friends
And not a word has passed between them
After so many years of companionship,
They just sit together
Under the same sky, passing time
Until morning.