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Sunday, 5 January 2014

Waver

I could talk of the beauty of the morning
Of how the trees & hedgerows rejoice
Thanks to the refreshment of overnight rain

I could talk of the nights dream:
Suspicions, surveillance, shop windows, sex
Secret steep passages, string linked doorways
Darkness, death & the unwavering love
Of ones own mother

Here a time for contrast
New life, old uncertainties
Draw down your own conclusions


This is a poem from Filmic: Love of Our World of Purples & Blues

Available as ebook from Kindle
or as a homemade print book, and audio cd from  poetryshop 

Saturday, 4 January 2014

Scape

To see not one person in the idyllic vista
To long for a certain someone in your arms
Ache at the sight of such immersible beauty
Nights indulgence of angels & spirits charms

I walked down True Lovers Walk
To the river, to the swans
I wandered, as if I was Hyperion
Let them talk, let them bloody well talk


This is a poem from Filmic: Love of Our World of Purples & Blues

Available as ebook from Kindle
or as a homemade print book, and audio cd from  poetryshop 

Friday, 3 January 2014

Sea Facing

Line of sight; cliff-top to cliff-top
Fog settled over sea and land
Echoes of a more confident time
Once majestic four storey terraces
Face proudly towards the shoreline

Their grimy cracked windows amplify
The corrosion of their iron balconies
Their dust covered doors welcome
Only the most unwelcome of guests
Time to turn, and about turn; no

This is not the joyous image
Conjured from strong accents
Reflected in sepia tone sunsets

This is not the leisurely bolt-hole
Where a days work might be rested
Where a nights dreams might begin

The search continues; inland I fear
To be away from the anticipated gear
That one assumes to surround decay
The dismay that is of a lost confidence
A lost purpose on the nations stage

Better the better people be found
I am not the man for it; too big a task
Needs immense imagination, boundless
Energy; for days, and nights, and weeks
Many months and years of rebuilding

Or children and parents & three more
Generations; all washing, washing
Their hands of the struggle, washing
The struggle right out into the sea


This is a poem from Filmic: Love of Our World of Purples & Blues

Available as ebook from Kindle
or as a homemade print book, and audio cd from  poetryshop 

Thursday, 2 January 2014

Thread

The small details: fence post tops, frills on skirts, smiles in place of frowns. Each day, as though we might know that voice, the flowers grow, the grasses bend, the breeze blows over the meadow. The search engine searches, I sit back and sigh, if only life was catalogued more clearly then the file would already be found.

More routes to the ancient and modern: songstress, poet, meditations muse and mistress, her timbres rattle with the dust of gold. One strum of lute, one clap of hand on taut steel wired gut, one tap of foot on the reflex peddle of a soft bass drum, one whisper that wails to it's soulful crescendo. That moment swept over, to be lived no more, not by me, not by you, not even by your lover nor by any other once vainglorious scoundrel.

Thus the rivers flow, paced by the seasons; in spate, in drought, ever onwards, ever falling towards the moon-filled oceans. All of this to keep the loins anxieties at a distance, all of this to quell the rising flames of those once fierce and lustful emotions, all of this to close off, to close down the silent witness.

The small details; a man-made rill, silk embroidered pyjamas, transference where once there was doubt.


This is a poem from Filmic: Love of Our World of Purples & Blues

Available as ebook from Kindle or as a homemade print book, and audio cd from  poetryshop 

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Overdone

All the chic of the city
In a moorland village
Chocolate and beige
Monsoon purple stripes
In the style of Rothko 
Yet antlers above the fire

Mostly they are young
The staff that is, as befits
This swipe at modernism
But neither youth nor
This extravagant whim
Are in truth sustainable
The numbers don't add up
I sit alone in a tabled room
Set out for forty-four covers

It might be different
Come Saturday night
But the farmers hereabouts 
Know that one swallow
Does not a summer make
More's then the pity


This is a poem from Filmic: Love of Our World of Purples & Blues

Available as ebook from Kindle or as a homemade print book, and audio cd from  poetryshop