Day 27 ~ In Defence of Loki

He’s a trickster and a liar.
We must accept that fact.
He does look like he’s crazy,
Just as he intends.

Loki spends his time alone
Pondering that master plan
With everything in place.
Until the time is right.

He knows and can foretell
How events will go.
He sits back and watches
As his cunning plans unfold.

Slighted by his family
He manipulates their weaknesses
Which keeps him well amused
Until the time is right.

He’ll embarrass all the gods
And make them look like fools
With his flouting of their rules,
Battling his boredom,
To keep himself amused.

The gods are often cruel
And far too serious.
As they indulge their pleasures,
Loki lolls about and laughs.
Loki played his game,
Until the time was right.

But look what they did to him.
They dragged him to a cave
They bound him to the rocks
With a serpent spilling poison,
Trickling past his thirst,
Until the end of days.

He can’t have been so bad.
His wife, dearly loved him.
In vain she sought to help,
Before despairing of the task.
He must have earned her love,
on those precious dark lit nights,
when the time was right.

One day the time will come
When Asgard falls at last.
Loki won’t defend them then.
He will take revenge.
I have a sense of humour too,
And I have read the runes.

Shifting

Ah, how it wounds the heart
to see the old ones shuffling
homeward through the park,
stumbling and insecure,
clasping their meagre shopping.
pausing at every step,
with no welcome home at their door.
The British winter is here.

Look at them.
Show no contempt,
for they are the tired warriors
on the slippery, frosted edge
of a road you too will tread

Lay still.
Listen to your breath.
Sweet sound.

The old lay still in the dark
listening to the singing
of the blood that flows,
pulsing through hardened arteries,
imagining the end.

Outside, in the city streets
young men try to sleep,
huddled up with a dog,
for the sake of body warmth,
but the cold keeps creeping in.

Ah, how it breaks my heart!

In the back lanes of Marrakesh,
it’s time for the evening meal,
time to share the broken bread
after giving thanks to God.
Eight hands reach to one plate.

The old man in the corner
rests on a low sedan
amid cushions of faded flowers.
His daughter strokes his head
and feeds him the best of the dates.

They told me there was once a time,
upon a time not so long ago,
when the porch of every rich man’s house
was a shelter for the poor.
The doors were left unlocked.
I vaguely remember that.

In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
a pleasure dome decree?
He never invited you or me,
as far as I recollect.
It’s covered in satellite dishes now.
The minaret’s derelict.

Ah, how the world keeps shifting.
Ah, how it greives my heart
that the balance is never right.

Can you rely on the place you call home?
Do you trust the tectonic plates?
Have you heard how the ice caps melt?
Do you think you’ll avoid the drones?
Will we blast ourselves out of existence?
Did we make a huge mistake
when we declared the gods are dead?
Do you ever get scared in the night?