Poem 370
Another song from The Nightdress musical … it’s sung by the one hundred year old Constance Kent who after serving two decades in prison for the murder of her infant half brother was released at age 40, emigrated to Australia and lived another sixty years … the fact that she lived so long was some of the reason why I wanted to write this story – what does a one hundred year old think of her sixteen year old self and the crime she committed, does she see that girl as herself or just one of many incarnations she has lived through? …
… I wrote it on the Greek island of Kos, working in the mornings on the stone patio outside the Bird House where Michele and I were staying … one afternoon after beginning work on this song I took a stroll down to the Lidl supermarket for supplies and found more and more words coming to me as I walked, I hadn’t brought a pen so had to memorise them … then at the supermarket my eye was caught by a display of jars of thyme honey and the chorus started flooding in on me … I couldn’t get back home fast enough …
(I love the haunting bittersweet aura of this song – and Tim Finn set it to a beautiful tune … )
Thyme Honey
Winter autumn summer spring down the ladder, down the years seasons shedding old dry skins stagnant water running clear Why go back, disturb dry leaves old dead lives with all the pain of unfurling memories of becoming green again All our days in time’s honey amber caught in a jar hold it to the light and see who we were, who we are Through the glass I see darkly all is held suspended there lost hours squeezed of their gold where have they gone now, where? Silent, dust in a sunbeam who comes here, who comes no more voices from a distant dream sound of a softly closing door Left alone and not alone other selves, skins I was in lives echo within my bones that soon will fade forgotten All our days in time’s honey amber caught in a jar hold it to the light and see who we were, who we are I am caught in time’s honey I’m caught and can’t fight free suspended in time’s honey each and every me Each and every me ...