Rain
By Ian Pople
A lexicon of words that were not
 said in childhood, and all of those
 that were, were said beside
 an upturned boat, lapped
 planking of the creosoted shed,
 were said into the wind on
 tussocky ground, by farm-rust vehicles.
 The buildings I could not complete
 without my father’s help, the wind
 in which I was at sea. Rain blooming
 in August that moved the land
 and over land toward the autumn,
 sliding through the gates of summer,
 feeling for the bone inside the wrist.
Source: Poetry (September 2017)


