The Poetry Corner

Wanderlust

By Paul Cameron Brown

Who administers to my needs? Is it the dandelion, so ant-encrusted, that yellow pollen dangles from a shiny abdomen suggestive of some actor's smeared and garish make-up? Or the cicada's song, difficult to describe, laundering thick summer heat? Perhaps, then, the Red Admiral butterfly especially active at the close of day and drawn to wooden lawn-furniture or the exposed human limb? If none of these breathes vigour or tonic through my nostrils, what of tubs of fresh water? Take pea-pods for crude, rudimentary boats and children as make-shift sailors, then they both shall spy the secrets of seas. Bold harbours will be their cues, astrolabes their hatchets in which to chart many a perilous adventure. A volume of Tom Swift and his Motorboat tames the haggard breast, soothes the savage beast. A trip to the fruit-cellar beaded with moisture and clammy with imaginary threat, chastens the cobweb from the dusty ledge and sees a privet-hedge hawk-moth trapped against the window-pane (a dark spot pressed much like a pirate's patch against both time & space). If meandering and nearing journey's end, think twice. Better red than dead. Brooding MacIntosh apples stain a slippery floor but the door to the orchard is always ajar. By night, an "I And The Village" Chagall painting draws a lad (and landscape) to stare and stare. Thickets of wild-grape, strawberry tendrils, two hares boxing in the meadow, a Winterspoon or Whip-Poor-Will towering above groves of walnut, lilac. Night air is fragrant (and lush) through a peep-hole and gate-way to the stars. Barns with ricks contain pitchforks like a mis-shapen mask protruding ever so faintly sinister in silhouette through a visionary sky. Remnants of ferret skin, lie interrupted, upon entering the chicken-coop. The soldier drinks, his tea and egg-cup abandoned. I don't have to go anywhere. Dark and moody, there is an arsenal of thought with stout marshal batons in my knapsack. The power to be led (and lead) stiff memory in rum kegs and wine casks. The brooding entrance to another world, if not in the palm of my hand, then very nearly a shout and stone's throw away.