St James’s Park
A swan with six cygnets in tow
takes to the water in St James’s Park :
from Duck Island it leads its charges
to the southern shore of the lake
There they waddle onto dry land
and begin to preen their feathers
the young aimlessly rolling in the dirt
their breasts covered in leaf debris
On the northern shore a black swan
lurks solitary and yet unconcerned
Here where camels, crocodiles
and even an elephant once roamed
and illicit couples came to canoodle
a picture post-card tranquillity reigns
and all this beauty just a stone’s throw
from the palace—and who on earth would
ever think of throwing the first stone ?
John Lyons