ADCOCK, Fleur
    
      
    
      
    Weathering
  
    
      
    Literally thin-skinned, I suppose, my face
  
catches the wind off the snow-line and flushes
with a flush that will never wholly settle. Well:
that was a metropolitan vanity,
wanting to look young for ever, to pass.
    
      
    I was never a pre-Raphaelite beauty,
  
nor anything but pretty enough to satisfy
men who need to be seen with passable women.
But now that I am in love with a place
which doesn't care how I look, or if I'm happy,
    
      
    happy is how I look, and that's all.
  
My hair will turn grey in any case,
my nails chip and flake, my waist thicken,
and the years work all their usual changes.
If my face is to be weather-beaten as well
    
      
    that's little enough lost, a fair bargain
  
for a year among lakes and fells, when simply
to look out of my window at the high pass
makes me indifferent to mirrors and to what
    my soul may wear over its new complexion.
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Stewart Island
  
    
      
    ‘But look at all this beauty’
  
said the hotel manager’s wife
when asked how she could bear to
live there. True: there was a fine bay,
all hills and atmosphere; white
sand, and bush down to the sea’s edge;
oyster-boats, too, and Maori
fishermen with Scottish names (she
ran off with one that autumn).
As for me, I walked on the beach;
it was too cold to swim. My
seven-year-old collected shells
and was bitten by sandflies;
my four-year-old paddled, until
a mad seagull jetted down
to jab its claws and beak into
his head. I had already
    decided to leave the country.
    
      
    
      
    
      
    For a Five-Year-Old
  
    
      
    A snail is climbing up the window-sill
    
      
    into your room, after a night of rain.
    
      
    You call me in to see, and I explain
    
      
    that it would be unkind to leave it there:
    
      
    it might crawl to the floor; we must take care
    
      
    that no one squashes it. You understand,
    
      
    and carry it outside, with careful hand,
    
      
    to eat a daffodil.
    
      
    
      
    I see, then, that a kind of faith prevails:
    
      
    your gentleness is moulded still by words
    
      
    from me, who have trapped mice and shot wild birds,
    
      
    from me, who drowned your kittens, who betrayed
    
      
    your closest relatives, and who purveyed
    
      
    the harshest kind of truth to many another.
    
      
    But that is how things are: I am your mother,
    
      
    and we are kind to snails.