Octet, or two women walking in the sun
I meet my friend, she has just flown in, and here we are in the Octagon
We go for gelato, tiramisu for her, me always mango, because it tastes
like summer, or a shining melody
sweetly played in tune
I read that in a Burns’ poem about luve, of course
It is out of date to my way of thinking – mango and love
are not always sweet, and these days there is
discord in our streets
I tell my friend of the hospital marches, of the recent hikoi
She says she wants to know more, and remarks on changing light
and I nod at our sky, so fulsome and pink like it’s holding something, maybe everything,
and say: how much time you got?
We stroll up and around the gentle slope of the hill, and she looks down
and asks about the plaques – Ihimaera and Tuwhare, Sargeson and Lord
and Turner, our new Poet Laureate of Nature
also of course Janet Frame
I take my friend to places of women among men
Edmond and Dallas, Hyde and McQueen – exactly eight voices
singing in the Octagon, and we say their names out loud
as we keep moving, keep talking
We are standing in the shadow of Rabbie, at the top, when
I remember the thing about the time capsule
buried under one of them – Joan de Hamel, her
X marks the spot
And I wonder what our time capsule would look like
if we buried one today – what we would gather to speak
for our world, whether there would be room for all
things we wish to save
My friend asks me how long I’ll stay, how my job’s working out
We are mere transients, I think, recalling the words of another
Scottish poet, recent visitor to our town, and now we are in the hot, hot sun,
and our ice creams are gone