Seaside

On the footpath by the sea
the tourists come and go.
the summer flowers gleam,
salt breezes softly blow.

On the footpath by the sea
the children run and play.
Pirate games and treasure maps
sweep their hours away.

On the footpath by the sea
tadpoles swim in drying streams,
the dogs lap all the puddles up
while walkers eat ice-creams.

On the footpath by the sea
here come the volunteers
to clear away the plastic
and gather mermaids tears.

Carrying my father home

Far heavier than I expected
and the size of an old sweet jar,
opaque plastic, black lidded.
Thank heaven it wasn’t transparent.
I could not have gone on like that.
I carried my father’s ashes
through the streets,
past the church and the chapel,
past the pizza parlour and meaty kebab shops,
under summer trees and fuming traffic,
everything poignantly normal.
We didn’t walk often together.
My father preferred his home.

I was sweating from heat and emotion.
Such a hot afternoon it was.