Jeremy RogersWrtitten in 1993Published by BBC 1994 'Poet of the Year' Illustration for BBC Wildlife Broadcast in Poetry Please May 1994 |
The Beast of Bodmin Moor Something is spooking the walkers, killing sheep. Ewes flicked like cotton wool balls, left sliced, rippered. No-one has truly seen it, given it shape. A libratory shift, swift at the edge of sight, it haunts those grey passages, deeper than sleep, turns rumours into newspaper features, fact-peppered with jaw comparisons, claw depth and power of bite that brand it cat. Cruel, bandit cat, a beast; yet cat enough for moor-grizzled farmers to will it, summon it, not vengeful in the least, live and whole for tabloid men with hungry lenses. Dogs, shot without a thought for such betrayal of trust, lack the imagination for such blood lust that touches these deep senses, our animal soul. I might have imagined something else out there alive besides the taffeta rustle of the moon drenched orchard, yet this bright, hard place pressed into unlidded meadows between the granite-humped moor and the slate edged sea, has been winter quarters for some gentle huntress. Unseen, her presence announced in the shamanic arrangements of her leavings: little heaps of ivory, horribly clean, piled neatly in the old pig pen. Such cold facts, small lives born to be snacks, a skull to each corner. She needs people near, perhaps, witnesses now and then. Her appearance now is a curtain call. Dappled, creamy in the black, size of a labrador, ears tufted. Beautiful Death come in spotted robe. I stare, and haloed eyes, waxing full, stare indolently back, then slowly, with heavy patience, close in a wink, heartbeats long. A cat kiss draws me in complicity, mutual forgiveness. My eyes open to the empty orchard. To a smile left leaving. |
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© Jeremy Rogers 1993, 1994, 2009, 2010 |