19 March 2019

Memories of a Wheel of Wind

She was like that.
A wheel of wind.
My mother possessed the kitchen
when she made bread.
I watched in wonder,
her softness of motion as she
stood in a white floury cloud.
Stretching dough.
She’d slap her hands on her apron,
flour dust rising like scattered smoke.
Everything seemed veiled
in a wintery leak of sunlight.

I was a crumb of a child.
She was the soprano.

 

Safety Matches and Other Falsehoods

When I was six,
I struck the red tip of a safety match
against the pavement in the garage.

I came to love the smell of sulphur,
and that burst of hot energy that
danced on a stick of wood.

Burnt my thumb once —
only once though. It blistered up
all big and juicy, and Mum said,

If you play with matches, you’ll
burn something. I tried smoking
a few years later …

 

 
Written for Twiglet #118 and Poetic Blooming #239 “Nurture”

6 responses to “19 March 2019”

  1. Both very vivid images. The visions of smoke rising in each tie them together nicely.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Violet.

      Like

  2. You have brought back some of my own memories with both the Kitchen and Matches. I also agree with Violet 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Some things are universal, I reckon.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. ‘Everything seemed veiled
    in a wintery leak of sunlight.’

    Such a vivid line.
    Love both poem, and the memories of those long wooden kitchen matches.

    Liked by 1 person

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