Friday, 14 August 2020

Interlude - A Poem of the Covid 19 pandemic

Credit: Pixabay


In the early weeks

most of the country heard the dawn chorus.

For a multitude, this daily song of nature,

praising its creator, 

surprised, amazed and delighted

those who normally woke

to engines revving, tyres squealing,

the cacophony of garbage collections, 

and a symphony of last night’s bottles

shuddering their way to recycling

or worse, to landfill.

Who knew? who cared?

The industrial day had begun.

 

In those extraordinary days,

the air felt pure as it drifted

across the silence,

giving just a hint of what

might be to come

if this foreshadowed

the death knell

of life-limiting fossil fuels.

Killers supplanted by

hydrogen drawn from the

untainted, exquisite air:

electrons excited by

untrammelled access to the sun:

pure white blades

of turbines

drawing their power 

from unpredictable movements

of air over land or sea.

 

 

 

In the later weeks

those thrilling awakenings 

frequently gave way to anxiety.

How long can this interlude last?

how can I survive it? physically, mentally.

My underpaid job may no longer exist!

how will I find food for my children?

The unlooked-for shock

of foodbank dependency.

 

In those rarified days

the whole world

glimpsed a future,

sadly built on lives  

of many who would not see it,

having succumbed

to the unseen killer

laying-in-wait in too many

everyday places;  

striking mainly, with ruthless efficiency

at the disadvantaged 

the already vulnerable and those 

who bravely gave succour

to the worst afflicted.

 

Might the memory of these martyrs

long outlast the trauma

of this pandemic,

and be a focus for the gratitude of many,

nursed back into life to engage with

a strangely altered world

with huge renewable opportunities.