St Helen’s Hospital – Image from National Library website…
(I wrote this last year, when my publisher The Cuba Press invited me to a poetry reading at a bookshop in Newtown... she suggested this theme... this wee thing hasn't had an airing, so I've let it out for air.)
In Wellington, it’s really an old town
a throughway to the zoo, home to
our hospital, multi-cultural food
and fond memories of my first-born
at St Helen’s Hospital, purpose built
for mothers and babies, like a hotel
for breast-feeders high on maternity
spilling our milk and love and tears
and then there was the night, after
La Leche, a meeting for feeding mums
when I drove home in the darkness
baby in a woven wicker basket on
the back seat, forgetting headlights
and the traffic cop stopped me on
Riddiford and when he saw my baby
snug under a cellular wool blanket
he waved me on with a warning, my
lights on full now, homeward bound
past the hospital where, as a young woman
in the early seventies, I moonlighted
as a nurse aide, on the orthopaedic
ward collecting false teeth and cleaning
them only to find I’d forgotten from
whose mouth the teeth came and
I cannot recall how I found the owners
but I do remember the anguish of
an old woman with broken hips
when I didn’t warm her bedpan
and sometimes we were sent down to
the new-born’s nursery to turn them
like clockwork, from one side to the
other, I wonder when I walk down
Lambton Quay, and see someone who
might have been a baby then,
did I once turn you over in Newtown?
Love this. I was born in Hawera but my two brothers who arrived after me were born at St Helen’s. Love the turnover line. We don’t know the half of who touches our lives.
Yes, let’s plan for a reading this summer! Would be so much fun to invite Jo from Gisborne to join us – or we could do a road trip to Gizzie. Can’t wait to read again with you. XXX
Love this. I was born in Hawera but my two brothers who arrived after me were born at St Helen’s. Love the turnover line. We don’t know the half of who touches our lives.
LikeLike
Thanks, Christine! xx
LikeLike
I’d love to have heard you read this with its marvellous galloping rhythm! One day!
LikeLike
Yes, let’s plan for a reading this summer! Would be so much fun to invite Jo from Gisborne to join us – or we could do a road trip to Gizzie. Can’t wait to read again with you. XXX
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is absolutely wonderful Maggie. So clever – just love it.
LikeLike
Thank you, Trish. xx
LikeLike