Wednesday, 16 May 2012

Patience by Steve Rudd


Those that tend fires require
A special form of patience
Watching through the window, winter-long

While the rain streaks; patience of a saint

Then, after bare grey days, at last
Catkins on branches unfurl daily until
The stumbling bee finally arrives

Late and cold like the spring at last

And the badger comes at night, or dusk
Rooting up the garden, from dark woods behind;
With patience to stay wakeful, and the stamina

You may glimpse its fleeting stripes by moonlight

Patience can make time pass quick or slow
Reconciling, days go by, like a pack of cards
Being shuffled and cut, and shuffled again

Jokers are always wild, spread out the deck

Red queen on black king; as pastimes go
It’s right up there with watching drying paint
Or having faith that things will ever change

Carry your cards, clock in, clock out, clock off

Have patience, they say; spring is coming -
It will come; it always does, sit tight
And tend your fire, and cultivate your garden

Long green spring evenings, now it’s light

But I was always better at starting fires
Than tending them, never saw the point
Of patience as a virttue (or a vice)

It’s not as if there’s ever any option…

Just sit there, and be a little patient
Tending your fire, not getting rash, taking your meds
In case your ever-coursing arteries harden

One day, if you’re patient, things may better!
One day, a lifetime’s end away from now.
Watch and learn, boy, watch and learn;
Life is what happens while you’re being patient.




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