The undoing of distance
poetry that unpicks time
that puts two and two together
though in this case one
High on a hill
overlooking the harbour
we celebrated Easter
and after ate bouillabaisse
as the dusk gathered
in alleys and street corners
and bathed the dust
in darkness
Above us
the cemetery sky
filled with inevitable stars
and that night her kiss
sent a shiver down my spine
life and death tasted
on the same tongue
I remembered an owl
crying in the wind
I remembered the rafters
where spiders prowled
in the early hours
before dawn
I remembered that age
was rendered meaningless
in a universe of decrepit light
and that the pain of pleasure
was the certainty of loss
What could I possibly
have known of love
all those years ago
and what could I possibly
tell you now
and why should you care?
John Lyons