by Catherine Edmunds
You’re long gone, won’t read this, can’t tell me about the cows’ skulls buried at the foot of the doorway, the boy who carried the oil lamp – the last to leave.
The statues are gone – robbed out. Pillars are pit props over at Etherley. Altars, desecrated, adorn the walls to a different god. But the bulls came over the sea
and soldiers don’t forget. Walls subside, they droop in waves. Dere Street stands firm, but how long? You expect me to know the words; these spoil heaps – bones, teeth,
a scrap of pottery, curved grey, smooth as the day it left the potter’s wheel. Charcoal crumbles from the last firing; another potsherd, exquisite Samian-ware, who broke it, when?
Along the via principia, cobbles, post holes for awnings, a hypocaust below. You’ve channelled the clouds onto a plinth where the wall bends and aches with the weight of your story.
The stump of a pillar, pollen on the breeze. Your tale is a spoil heap, the land-mottled weathering, a burial, a tiny death, where the red stone crumbles. |