Three poems
/By Jane Murray Bird
Tricked
Nine months since we wassailed
away together toasting forked
branches with the blood of your son,
whichever way the wind falls,
autumn stalks this eve.
Inside, thawed to the core,
that marzipan plan waits out
the crossed sticks of winter.
Workhorse, grafter, but after
six springs, genealogy brings
back the tiny wise crabbles of
Tian Shan, far from the tree.
Tributary to Elizabeth Siddal
Ophelia rides a rusty motorbike
sticklebacked, tickled by willows
in the Hogsmill. Me and her meander
too far from the Thames for remembrance
(last train from Waterloo 2202.)
We paint queenfisher blue on the Watersedge
Estate where once Millais had his Way and
she lay: a mused with pneumonia from the cold
baths and watery stares of long dead men.
Unearthed
I
Stole from the charity shop, or
rather rescued from the bins since
we weren’t allowed to sell them:
one skin, big red brush, legs
hanging limply and glass-eyed
head lolling chicly over one shoulder
like my cats sleep each night
on the back of the sofa. An accessory
that did not pretend to be anything
other than a dead body. Only a
set of silver snare jaws on one paw
might have made it more honest.
I brought it home for the feel
of that thick furred tail between my
fingers, but the cats bottled, backed up
and hissed, would not come to bed.
II
Moving the water butt at the end
of the garden revealed the curled
skeleton of a cub wormed clean
with only tiny black bean nose
and whiskers attached. There were
no visible bone breaks from impact
or ways to have become trapped,
perhaps it was just a safe place
to die of hunger or poison or infection,
a few metres from meddling fingers,
cat cages, interfering oral syringes.
I remembered a year ago when my fearless
feral had refused to go outside
for days, sniffed and retreated to his bed,
waiting for the scent-change of death.
III
December morning, frozen at the kerb,
a vixen caught mid-run. No blood, not
even from a nostril – orange eyes open,
fixed, like a perfectly executed piece
of taxidermy. Later, when I am asked
why I am carrying a dead fox, I will
explain that she was just too beautiful
to leave lying in the gutter. Her black
stockinged limbs still reached beyond
the bumper as I slid her in - next to the turkey
- like an Egyptian cat, ready for her next life.
A note in glitter on sticky pink paper:
This is just to say
there’s a fox in the freezer.
Jane Murray Bird studied creative writing with the Open University in Scotland, gaining a First Class Honours degree. Her work has appeared in magazines including Magma, Mslexia, Under the Radar, Prole and Hippocampus. She lives by the sea in Edinburgh and is equal parts flâneuse and garden hermitess.