Activities of daily living

 

Back from the refill shop, weighed down

with staples, I pour loose flour into Kilner jars

watchful not to spill the meanest scruple.

But I’ve misjudged capacity,

bought more than there is storage for.

The funnel overruns: I ask myself

(were it allowed) how many people could

our surplus feed. And how long for?

 

Here is our laundry, soaked and rinsed and wrung

by hand, or pulled from drum to basket in wet lumps:

the mundane that makes us human,

going out and coming in like a tide.

We do not dress in salt-damp clothes.

My town has fuel enough – its water pumped

and clean. There’s soap to buy.

No dust of demolition in the wind.

 

Replanting our backyard in terracotta

is a long-term proposition, a luxury.

To recover what has been starved,

cut down, polluted and uprooted

needs more than water and new soil.

I gaze at my earth-dirty hands,

believe in century-old harvests, and

grieve at the absence of olive branches.

 

vii. 2025

Culture Matters

Poetry Wivenhoe 

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