The Harris Museum
I.
I lean down
to touch
them
like
an
ancient
huntress
taste
not
blood
but paint
still follow
the trail
of red
(do I detect the hint of a limp?)
up the stone steps
past paintings
depicting
your hunting
like the Stations
of the Cross
(watercolours)
those old old hunters
we will know as the Dwellers
in the Water Country
semi-amphibious
blue-limbed
against
the green
of the fenlands
(it is 11,500BC)
bows drawn back
like the grins
of wolves
the madman
with the axe who
severed your tendons
before you limped on
dripping red
your pain
sucked up by
the sedge
the last
shudder of
your thick skin
not enjoyed by midges
at mid-winter
in a pool.
II.
On the
second floor
in the Discovery Gallery
where your skeleton stands
beyond hunting trophy
beyond Messiah
beyond icon
I pause for breath imagining
flints tips against ribs
heaving lungs
the loneliness
of your
heart.
III.
When I press
the red button that blasts
out your roar
the city trembles
breathes in and breathes out
the paddle of a dug-out canoe
splashing a reminder
of aurochs, deer,
wolf, elk…
*With thanks to the Harris Museum for the images.







