Poem 226
Another of my ‘name’ poems (see Poems 135 and 203) that once upon a time might have been called pen portraits – it’s based on a woman that Jill’s sister kept house for in Seatoun … she lived a life of great ease and privilege as if in deliberate response …
( I like sliding like scissors to the sand and the still life of a house as a rain barrel reflecting nothing … )
Rosa
Beyond the watered razored greenness of lawn there is a hedge a road and then a beach calm coastal water sliding like scissors to the sand the house is legendary its shade deep as money life held still inside it like old rain in a barrel beneath a cloudless sky this cat from next door has a nutzlos eye always weeping she is forever finding it asleep on her decor its ugly head propped on a stack of ironing she neither shoos nor feeds it but when she brushes too close and the cat leaps scrabbling crazily on the varnished floor she laughs the waves crease and plane in far away on the other side of the hedge she has another house in Sydney she went to see the harbour full of sails on Australia Day she has friends she sees when she chooses and every year a cruise her accent is still deep she still has a number tattooed on her arm