POETRY
Readers looking at this website on a small screen or mobile phone:
For the best experience, it is recommended that you hold your device so that
the screen can be viewed HORIZONTALLY.
Here's a selection of my poems for AUGUST
I update this website at the start of each month with a fresh selection of my poetry.
PLEASE VISIT HOME (click the HOME button) for my poetry news...
(The control button is usually situated at the BOTTOM right of the screen on portable devices)
Sunflowers - Vincent Van Gogh
SUNFLOWER
Down at the pub, the rumours had soon spread : our local farmer’s selling off his land. When goat-man left and pheasant farm shut down, we realised there was truth in what was said.
Soon, other tenants left their grazing land — moved horses on, their meadows left to weeds, rusty with ragwort, pastures overgrown — a change the roaming deer can’t understand.
Birds leave the hedgerows, rabbits on the run as men and their machines rip up the land; at the site entrance they erect a sign : Building Communities For Everyone….
But not for hawthorn, fox, orchid or deer — those residents have gone, their fields stripped bare. On this sterile plane earth’s heaped in piles, nothing’s left alive on the levels here.
Pipes and bricks arrive all Summer long but, while the men were busy on the site, Nature crept back to green those heaps of soil and, on the highest, planted something strong.
Unnoticed, this plant grew more each day till giant golden face turned to the sun. This was Nature’s turn, a defiant sign — two fingers to those stealing land away
|
|
|
GIANTS They came, skimming our chimney pots, one summer day when we were out — just reaching to the field beyond. Our startled neighbour told us how she’d watched transfixed, holding her breath, as wickerwork just cleared the roof.
This morning they were back again on driest, calmest day for weeks : when sun burnt off the valley’s mist and set damp cobwebs glittering.
I opened doors for cool fresh air but caught a growing, roaring sound — a giant’s panting laboured breath. A fiery red face glowered down to billow over field–edged oak.
For seconds it stood quite erect, towering over house and tree then nylon rippled and collapsed to stubble field, descends from skies : colossus, creeping down to rest.
Ants seemed to pull a giant low and roll away the canopy — packing the basket with his face. Now, they must wait for transport home : their day over, mine just begun.
|
|
|
MIRAGE Out of the field, trotting with silent tread, through nettles, under birch and hazel boughs, we’d seen the signs : he’d visited before, in winter’s frost and January’s snow… but not mid-afternoon in hot July.
Nonchalantly jogging, taking his time, passed dozing family cat across parched lawn, he paused to look about, close by the house, ignoring us although we’d caught his eye.
He held us all transfixed. No thought fox this — but real – unlike Hughes’ dream. We watched him go on down the drive, beyond the patio where we all rubbed our eyes at what we’d seen.
|
|
|
ABOUT THE HOUSE A helicopter lands out in the grounds and soon a limo churns the drive to dust with guests who feel their stature is enough to make this discrete drive along the limes.
The house pays for itself as an hotel — fine dining in the splendour of the past — where kings and courtesans, the famous stayed, but would these ones who pay be Nancy’s types?
Would Nancy have approved a giant slide for entertaining masses at her home? The Water Garden’s like some city park near café and a playground for the young.
And what of weekend hordes out in the grounds, with buggies, picnic baskets, screaming kids? But luckily they seem to stay away From quiet parts of Cliveden I like best :
The Secret Garden, views from Canning’s Oak. How Nancy’s face looks down on soldier’s rest; sad cemetery for pets at Illex Grove and grassy seats used at Britannia’s test.
On autumn days, when mums and kids have gone, green woodpeckers inspect The Balustrade and, in the woodland, muntjacs ghost between the fruiting chestnuts, rhododendron’s shade.
In quiet times the sense of how things were seems captured in the changing of the light — a shadow on the terrace over there, a sudden gust of wind puts birds to flight.
|
|
|
THE BUTTERFLY BUSH Self-sown, on waste ground, in old masonry, it’s found a toehold on old factory sites, populates the ruins of stately homes. Once a cultivar, it slipped away to set up home beside the railway tracks, on abandoned buildings, sprouts from broken paths. Buddleia can outgrow some native plants, seeds germinate on dry and hostile ground; its panicles of tiny lilac flowers are where the bees and butterflies are found. And, at a time with species in decline, when campaigns urge Save Butterflies and Bees our government has found time to decide that buddleia is no more than a weed…
DEFRA (Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) Has declared buddleia to be an “invasive alien species.”
|
|
|
PERKINS’ FARM Trespassing. Secret borders of the farm where boys from our estate would stray between banked dead nettles, cow parsley and the stream. Beyond the cinder bank the broken barn :
ramshackle cars, forsaken old machines; nearby, deep water channelled over rocks, splashing bricked sides below the ragged docks and once, dream like, kingfishers here were seen.
Above the rocks the stream more calmly moved : watery home of rat and vole, hunting ground for adventurous boys with working slug gun, catapult, stones... and aim unproved.
Then there was our Tree : a crazy willow leaning giddily across the stream, an unsupported ladder of green fronds — span for the stream that flowed dark and deep below.
High in the crest (some said where lightning struck) the trunk had split : a hollow gallery. Here we perched, The Boys, full of bonhomie : joking, boasting of girls, cursing our luck.
It was The Muckers tree — formidable to climb, with bark worn smooth, nowhere to grip, the sloping trunk...and water should you slip — crow's nest view : prize for the brave and able.
But then the farm was sold. Our Tree dug-up when brook was channelled, dredged and gentrified. Farmhouse and barn were bulldozed down. We sighed for lost forever fields of buttercups,
the herds of Friesian cows, and meadow sweet. When land was levelled — hedges all grubbed up — school replacing orchard and pond’s kingcups — Our landscape turned to houses, street on street.
Today, more suburbs march across green space. We concrete over land our parents knew; but landscape should be children’s rights and due, yet more and more is lost without a trace.
Muckers – Gloucester dialect for friend or mate.
|
|
|
ARUM MACULATUM A flasher's in the undergrowth! From cowl-like spathe, a spadix looms: poker-shaped, purple and erect.
This plant's strange notoriety relates to how it looks in Spring — its bearing's spawned some bawdy names like Adam and Eve, Cows and Bulls Jack in the Pulpit, Naked Boys.
Its common name of Cuckoo Pint sounds innocent but it's not right as “Pint” should really rhyme with “mint”… Priest's Pintle tells a different tale.
This plant has got a hundred names and folklore's built up down the years: some gullible young country girls believed that just to touch a leaf would make them pregnant overnight.
Well known for its toxicity, in Tudor times the plant was used by washer-women starching ruffs, their burnt and blistered hands confirmed the harmful nature of Starch Root.
By Autumn how the Arum's changed: died back, green cowl and arrow leaves, now plant appears as Naked Girls — brazen and pale, ringed with bright beads... These berries send to A & E more casualties than other plants... Most dangerous, the Cuckoo Pint.
|
|
|
SLEEPLESS My prostate is an evil swine, it wakes me through the night, its message is “You need the loo !! ” — Surely that can’t be right?
Convinced, I think my bladder’s full and trek off for a pee... Now, wide-awake from broken sleep I find I cannot wee.
The signs are there — I need the loo but barely raise a tinkle; tired out and I’m back to bed to sleep like Rip Van Winkle.
It seems I’ve hardly been asleep when woken up again by that very strange sensation that signals :“Bladder must be drained.”
So, several times throughout the night I’m up and down like this — sleep deprived and tired out because I cannot piss…
|
|
|
The Harvester - Vincent Van Gogh |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ALL POEMS ON THIS WEBSITE ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT