On
the Richmond bus to Nelson passing Polstead Road
you
only had to say it, and everyone knew, unspoken
we
almost dared not look, it stirred such potent thoughts
caused
laughter, mocking, and a deeply seated superstition
innuendo
out the window, the road that leads to there
To
where? You ask? But
we all knew, we knew for sure
that’s
where the loonies go and you’ll go there for sure
we’d
tell each other, laughing, pointing, up that road
if
you’re not careful, shit a brick, you’ll end up there
What’s
up there? But
no one speaks, it’s all unspoken
get
off the grass and up your arse with superstition
hoodackie,
thingummybob, bite your bum thoughts
no
cock crowed thrice as I denied , but in my thoughts
were
you and him but tightly kept, ashamed for sure
of
knowing what was up that road, alas not superstition
the
halfway mark en route, bus stop Polstead Road
get
off the grass, half pie inside I laughed, my shame unspoken
the
loony bin we shouted up the boohai pointing there.
I
daren’t admit in public on the bus that I’d been there
in
Aunty’s Morris Minor up that road; my thoughts
I
kept inside, our weekend visits left unspoken
the
loony bin they shouted but none of them so sure
not
the way that I was, not exactly what was up that road
yes
I knew just how to thwart suspicion, superstition
Scottish
names they gave the villas, avoiding superstition
Stirling
at the top was called the lock-up, dangerous to be there
but
more benign was Kinross halfway up a landscaped road
among
ornamental conifers, the bowling lawn, some say their thoughts
still
haunt the valley, patients weaving baskets, no one’s sure
just
what they felt besides the shock of ECT, most of it unspoken
the
loony bin, we shouted, yet kept the worst unspoken
for
if we named or claimed this thing we fed our superstition
the
potential that was lurking at this intersection meant for sure
a
powerful sense of self protection; we were never going there
up
Polstead Road, we mocked and scoffed … but in my thoughts
I
knew the way by heart, each bend, and every valley of that road
nga’s
not superstitious
and whatu, is
possibly an eye,
or
hailstone
(yes,
I get that for sure) yet up that road my thoughts still go when
ngawhatu
meant loony and both of you … but now it’s not unspoken.
© Maggie
Rainey-Smith
Featured on The Tuesday Poem Hub with
permission.
Editor: Jennifer Compton
Editor: Jennifer Compton
I am more or less just back in Australia from an excellent trip to Wellington to take in the Poetry Conference and Litcrawl. Heavens, what a weekend. Now Maggie is someone I know, I always seem to bump into her when I am in town, she's quite a feature of my visits, so I wasn't a bit surprised to be rubbing shoulders with her. And then she stood up at the conference and hit us with this poem. What a stunner. I was very much taken with it. I loved the way Maggie used the old school vernacular, and the old school mindset. And of course, the poem meant just that little bit more to me because my husband's mother was the deputy matron of Ngawhatu for quite a long time. My husband spent his school holidays in her cottage on the grounds. (I remember thinking when I met him that we might have a chance because he was so cool about being around mad people.) Thanks Maggie, for this excellent piece of work, and for the dredging up of something that must be almost forgotten. AND I am thinking of you tonight, as your new book, Daughters Of Messene (Mākaro Press), is being launched in Wellington. More power to your writing elbow!
Maggie Rainey-Smith is a novelist, poet,
short story writer, essayist and book reviewer. She approaches her
subject matter with fresh insight, extending the genre of women’s
fiction in particular. She has a Bachelor of Arts in English
Literature as well as several other writing-based qualifications. Her
first novel About
Turns is set in Wellington and explores issues of class and
relationships. Her second novel Turbulence
is also published by Random House. Her third novel, Daughters
of Messene, is published by Mākaro Press.
Maggie's blog -
Today's editor, Jennifer
Compton, lives in Melbourne. Her poem, 'Now You Shall Know', won the
Newcastle Poetry Prize in 2013, and the collection
of the same name was published this year in Australia, while her
verse novella, Mr
Clean and The Junkie was published in New Zealand as part
of the Hoopla series 2015 (Mākaro Press).
In
addition to today's feature be sure to check out the wonderful poems
featured by the other Tuesday Poets, using our blog roll to the left
of this posting.
3 comments:
Thank you for this honour, Jen.
Now I'll have another blog to read every Tuesday. Haiku
An intriguing poem, with so much implied but not - quite - revealed.
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