Martin Edmond
Ballance
The newspaper man turned politician
reclines in his seat outside the Council Chambers
looking diagonally across the intersection
to where the Chronicle offices now stand
( his rag was called the Herald ).
His last avatar was toppled from its column
at Pākaitore, the meeting ground
back in 1995
by those whose ancestors he rode down upon
with alacrity, cracking his whip
across their naked backs ―
they beheaded it then threw
both head & torso into the river.
The empty column remains
& now this bronze effigy sits
with one booted foot upon the ground
the other crossed upon its knee
its elbow on the table at its side
looking lugubriously across the way
at the offices of his rival
in what is quite possibly
an administrative mistake
or serendipitous felicity
in this town of graceful errors
where everything that’s wrong
will be put right again someday
just not today & not tomorrow either.
At Huriharama
A pheasant creaks in the long grass
the ochre-painted convent doors stand open
I do not take off my shoes & go inside
I hear laughter coming through another door
It is not the laughter of nuns
It’s raining again as I walk up the hill
to the ochre & red-painted church
which may or may not have been unlocked
circumambulate
counter-clockwise
On the way back down I pick a lemon
from a low old tree
a woman dandling a child upon her knee
waves through the window
she is mana whenua too
On River Road another pheasant
or the same one whirrs into the air
alights in front of the car
jewelled bird, out of an old tale
I forget to look for the grave of the poet
The Grand Hotel
It is raining in the cupboards under the mirror
so we don’t open them
the power points crackle & spark as you pass
& you can’t close any of the windows properly
Outside a giant Saddhu is trying to talk
his Bombay cat onto a bus for Mumbai
frangipani trees drop yellow & white flowers on the footpath
the carillon assiduously marks each quarter
but declines to chime upon the hour
the dome of the observatory is sheathed in grey
& the sky maintains a blue silence
at least until darkness falls
with its squealing tyres & sepulchral dub
burnin’ & a-lootin’ at night . . .
Meanwhile the desk clerk is on the phone
to Sunil, his boss, about the homeless
people in the Governor’s Suite
who are making toasted sandwiches in their room again
in despite of the regulations ―
every time the fire alarm goes off
it costs Sunil fifteen hundred dollars
so when the sandwich maker starts to smoke
we do open up the cupboard doors
& let the beautiful water run out all over the floor
then sit down to a peaceable breakfast
of bread & cheese, salami, water cress & yoghurt
& while we are thus engaged the Saddhu
finally persuades the driver to take his cat
on the bus which turns out not to be going
to Mumbai after all but to Bulls
half a lifetime down the road from here.
Martin Edmond was born in Ohakune, New Zealand and lives in Sydney, Australia. He is intending to spend 2023 in Kurohime, Japan.
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