Monday 15 June 2020

Night Woods in Fog

In 2013 and 2014 I made quite a number of night walks off-path through deep woods without torch or mobile, basically to see what it was like. This resulted in two long poems, 'The Woods at Night', posted on 13 April 2016, linked here , and 'Wood Trek', posted on 21 November 2018, linked here . The intros to those poems give more information on the conditions under which the walks were made. I thought that was it, but on 1 November 2015 (All Saints Day) a monstrous thick fog descended, just like the good old London pea-soupers those of us of a certain age remember well, and I could not restrain my curiosity to find out what it would be like to trek the woods in the dark and through thickest fog: 'Night Woods in Fog' records the experience. It being All Saints Day I also wrote a short lyric which follows as an addendum at the end of the poem. 

-------------------

Sunday 1 November 2015

November heath at twilight and the fog
Is sodden-thick, like wadding stuffed around
The looming gloom of beech and chestnut trees,
Gone vague as distant mountains; vista is
Destroyed, there’s only thick miasma, brown
As rats’ fur, clumping greasily on the grass.
Within that bulging mucous murk, made fawn
And grainy by the orange village lights,
There’s a sound of giggling girls and barking dogs
But nothing seen.
                               In minutes I’m alone,
Walking the metalled track to the incline’s lip
Which sinks into the woods. The village lights
Are distant, fading fast. A racing dog
With winking collar angles through the fog –
A shrouded walker follows with a torch;
They meld into the bilious gloom. My footsteps
Crackle and die. This mild moist night, I sweat.
    The clammy lychgate creaks; I pass into
The woods, descending into coal-black dark.
The leaf-fall crunches underfoot but makes
No difference to the swelling touch-felt silence.
Tramping the sandy bridlepath, night sight
Of sorts develops, though all it manages
Is grey mass told from dark mass; hint and squint
Are used to guess the fog crowding the crowns
Of oak and maple, tamping every fissure
With a sheeny sponge that’s matt and grubby to
The eye. And weird, at waist, outleaning mounds
Of rotting ferns define themselves as grey
And use-blanched dishcloths.
                                                   At the wood’s black depth
I leave the mud-sand path and strike into
The trees; I have the untracked route by heart
But all is changed by the cloud-thick darkness, brewed
By the bundling fog, infilling vistas used
In night sight to adjudge felt place and distance.
And since my last walk leaf drop has occurred
So that a sour-sharp mulch of birch and ash
And oak leaves, shrouding every half-hint waymark,
Has merged with trunk-trapped fog to make a screed
Of indirection that’s unreadable.
Stymied, I search that sludge-like dark for glims
Of fallen birch boughs, used to point my way;
Mole-blind, I miss them, shambling warily
In arcs to find a route; shins, knees and hands
Scour bush and bramble, flesh-stung, till at last
By hope and instinct in that flea-brown sump,
I fetch up panting on a stream’s wet bank.
    As if with cataract, I foot-feel hints
For the double plank across, now lost in leaf-pile
Which also swamps the stream; eventually,
I ease across, toe-led and darkness-blind.
On the far bank with step and step and squint,
I track the stream until the woodfloor slopes
And, thankful to respond, I turn uphill
Through tree stands clogged with solid palls of night
So that sensation is an only guide –
That instinct-memory that shifting masses
Truthfully tell the way. Short-breathed, ache-limbed,
I reach my goal at incline’s top. And stand.