The Walkers

As soon as we had died, we decided to walk home.

A white tatterflag marked where each journey began.

It was a slow business – so much water to be crossed,

so many dirt roads followed. We walked together, but alone.

 

You must understand – we can never be passengers any more.

Even the smallest children had to make their own way

to their graves, through acres and acres of sunflowers,

somehow no longer pretty. A soldier cradled a cigarette, a teddy bear

 

and his gun. He didn’t see us pass – our light was far too thn.

We skirted villages and cities, traced the meanderings of rivers.

But beyond it all, the voices of our loved ones called

so we flowed through borders like the wind through railings

 

and when impassable mountains marked the way,

soared above their peaks like flocks of cloud like shoals of rain.

In time the fields and woods grew weary and the sea began –

you could tell we were home by the way our shadows leaned.

 

We gathered like craneflies in the windowlight of familiar rooms,

grieving for all the things we could never hold again.

Forgive us for coming back. We didn’t travel all this way

to break your hearts. We came to ask if you might heal the world.

 

from The Golden Mean (Picador, 2015), ? John Glenday 2015, used by permission of the author and the publisher

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