Read A Dragon's Egg Online

Authors: Sue Morgan

A Dragon's Egg

© 2011 S
UE
M
ORGAN

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or information storage and retrieval systems—without the prior written permission of the author.

ISBN: 978-1-908282-94-1

Published by O
RIGINAL
W
RITING
L
TD.
, Dublin, 2011.

Some of the poems featured in this book have been published in Static Poetry Volumes I, II and III, The Poetry Map (NI Arts Council), Te Best of Writing for All 2010 and online in HaikuJ, Every Day Poets and Writing4All.

It is the first time they have appeared together in a collection.

A D
RAGON'S
E
GG

Long ago you put the stone egg
into my hand. Turned again
to paddle ten toes in Stickle Tarn
giving your small child's smile.

Pink and grey, laid by Lakeland mountain.
I have it now, held in the nesting palm
of a winter hand. A touch-stone.
Comfortable, sustaining even,
as I close five fingers about its enduring curves,

hold in my mouth the rounded feel
of Earth's chronicle, ready
to entrust with subtle kiss
memories that belong to me alone.

Worn smooth, soothing. Solid.
My granite talisman against
decay, I try to hatch you
on the wing of warm thought,
a sleeping dragon that waits.

D
OODLES
(
MADE BY
C
LARKS
)

Blue shoes.
Beautiful blue canvas shoes,
that once enclosed tiny toes, hidden
from mother bird pecks, my kisses
which would have you an infant yet.

Blue shoes.
Happy shoes that splashed
the water's edge at Mawgan Porth.
Shrieked surprise at sand-shift under
unsuspecting feet that took tumbles
and danced your Humpty Dumpty jig.

Shoes that scaled the heights
of chain- wire fenced adventure, gathered
solar system gobs of clay from muddy puddles,
then toddled you straight to childhood.

R
OUNDING THE
C
IRCLE

My infant knees bend, scrape their softness
on millstone's hard-hewn flags,
the gritty pavements of Oxford Street,

chalked ‘a's and ‘o's in pink and yellow,
pastel against your brown skin, taught well in Trinidad
before you came to live next door.

I try to copy but my large drawn shapes have gaps.
I make a fist and try harder, tongue between teeth,
pressing down until chalk crumbles into dust.

Effort leached at once
by East Lancs rain, wet
we go inside for cheese on toast.

I the teacher now, hand out pristine sheets
and colouring pens to small hands
that still slip and slide in the struggling.

R
IS FOR
R
EMEDIAL

On my first day of teaching
the Head took me to a room
at the end of the corridor,
the one with peeling paint at the edges
and old yellow sellotape stuck to the windows.
I had a view of the deck- access flats,
the kids' view was me.

They gave me 1R but never said what the R was for.
There were two Waynes and a Wendy
who wouldn't take off her coat.
Wayne One banged his head on the desk
towards an upturned nail at the corner.
Wayne Two asked if it would snow,
and the kids looked at me.

First staff meeting, I asked for coloured pencils
‘You're teaching History, not effing Art'
was the official reply.
So I bought a pack from Woolworths,
with a sharpener and some paper.
We drew pictures of the pyramids
and stuck them over purple paint
and the kids just smiled.

By the end of five years we'd covered the walls,
It'd snowed twice and the nail
was truly hammered into wood.
The kids laughed as they left me standing there,
Wendy, still with her coat on.

C
ROSSING THE LINE

You sat on my steps on a Saturday night.
I, back from the Knowles,
you, rice-flail in hand, arms by your side,
pain pooling in the knuckle duster
which shone under street lights.

‘Can I have a drink, Miss?
‘Coffee,' I said, ‘nothing more!' as

I opened the door and crossed
a threshold to moral dilemma.
Whilst the kettle boiled
you watched Match of the Day.

I made a bundle of your things,
wrapped in the bag I hid under the sink.

Gently, I washed blood from your hands
like a mother, and felt like Mary Magdalene.

You waved goodbye when you knew
the coast would be clear,
that drink-induced sleep, and time,
blessed you and protected you,
keeping your Mum from harm. Just for today.

T
IMES
T
ABLES

Raymond didn't do maths
or, so he said.
He didn't do art or music either.
Illiterate, was what they wrote. But,

full of entrepreneurial zeal,
Raymond found his niche
running rent boys
in the Witton Park flats.

He could calculate when the dole
was due and how many times
boys would have to turn table
to keep his Mum from the street.

In the second term of Fifth year
the EWO dragged him back into school
giving enough time before the Easter leaving
to practice how to write her eulogy.

J
APANESE
S
HORT
F
ORM

Sunshine spears
slice field daylight
into neat portions

x

Snake sheds its skin
on hard stone wall
diamond reminder

x

Iced winter rain
drips stars on the dustbin
galvanised sparkle

x

Nested courgettes
wear bright summer bonnets
paradise salad

Talking to strangers
red wine in hand
now we are brothers

x

The black rat snake
unwinds his night body
greets the sunshine

x

Ragweed stars
bright edge of the meadow
blind horses walk by

x

Heat haze rises
over bubbling tarmac
walking on toffee

x

Peeling potatoes
view from the window
a skinned sun sets

D
ORNOCH
19
8
9
– A C
OLD
W
INTER

Beneath quilted hills in hibernation
the Old School House at Rearquhar
lay just as it should, at slumber.
Your father's dreams flowing

through Èibhleag's black waters
to season summer gathered wood.
We walked the bridge, talked
and threw sticks into snow- melt,

words to fashion a future,
forever frozen in clear air.
Such a welcome, as warm as lambswool,
cossetting quietly without show.

That below -stairs hideaway bedroom,
all mellow wood and creaking sounds
that sloped away with the ceiling.
Then, cloutie dumpling, a greeting
that reached down the years,
to pass to generations yet to swell the room.

You looked at me and then there was only us
and I knew that I could have stayed forever.

T
HE
K
ING'S
H
IGHWAY

What a drive!
We jump in the car hired at the airport,
head down the King's Highway,
windows wide open,
the ‘aircon' won't work.
Roasting.
Driving to Aqaba.

Pirated road songs blare
from worn out cassettes.
‘Hotel California' loud as you please
as we speed to the Gulf
on the squat open road.
The sea of the desert,
a black tarmac slick
that moves trucks from the south
to the souks in the north
of Amman.

Rusting wrecks to the left of us,
a donkey carcass to the right,
wind grabs our hair by its roots,
watery fear grips our bellies,
trucks tear over the hill
headed straight
for
us.
Five in a row,
hurtling to be first
down the slopes
of Abraham.

Playing chicken with no brakes!

Skewered and kebab'd.
Fried,
on that highway to hell.

Y
IN AND
Y
ANG AT
D
UNDRUM
B
AY

My edges touch your edges.
Naked knees on the hard crust of sand
Where the sea spills into warm waters,
A crochet fringe along the shore
Where my fingers touch your fingers,
Coral tentacles which finger the void.

Your love, which is for me,
Lies against me and through me,
Washes over me,
An ocean that swallows the day.
A purple sunset spills its colours into rain,
Spreads its wings across the sky for me.

My mind slowly edges towards your mind,
Feels the frilled rim of your life,
Your edges have edges that fill mine.

T
HE
C
OURTYARD AT
S
T
J
OHN'S

When I next see you I will kiss
The corners of your mouth with my eyes
And hand to you sweet lilies of the field,
Grown on white cliffs in mid-winter.

I will build a house for you
On the hillsides of Ayios Yeorgias,
Big enough to hold your dreams
And feed you with fat, warm-scented figs
From the courtyard at St John's.

I will let red hibiscus fall
From behind my ears
And let sounds of the sea
Wash over my shoulders.

I will hand to you
The brown paper parcel of my days
Spent in long waiting
And give you yesterday's news,
Of how the Wall in Berlin has fallen.

T
HE
C
ONVENT
B
ATH

Bleak born, ill born,
born of no morn,
no mourning aloud.
Taken from her turned out womb
and dashed across the stone.
A rabbit at its rut would have more
charity than you, who forced yourself
in spite of God, on Brides of Christ.

The bath, deep, so deep,
to mask the final cries and shrieks of birthing.
Burning, bawling from your ‘fires of hell'
and in their calling shout your name.

The edge, the lip, so large,
and curved, just so,
to catch the skull head on,
make haste the journey.
Buried in the bloodied rags beyond the sacred wall.

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