Pages

Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Ears And Explorations

On the one line
A long path
Break it up
Break it up
Break it up

A longer story
Of shorter lines
No thoughts thought
Of dissimilar paths

Those ringing sounds of closing down
Traffic moves along the tidal causeway
Winds and rooks and once good looks
Those ringing sounds of closing down

On the one line
A long path
Break it up
Break it up
Break it up


Monday, 17 November 2014

Irksome I: A Review

Breakfast was cold
It suited the cold stories
I came for poetry

My mistake
This was more like
A chilled
Thriller writers exposé

Dan and Ruth led off
Pouring scorn
On our lack of knowing -
The pictures all hung square

Most people had been last year
I won’t be back; the breakfast was old
& it suited their over told stories


Sunday, 16 November 2014

Den

Harvest time; first we piled the bales high
On the trailer, carted them from field to barn

Sons of farmers and village urchins we became architects
Future participants perhaps for Kevin’s Grand Designs

The main space was deep inside the piled bales
The entrances, and exits, had twists and turns

Part to keep people from knowing of our secret den
Part, as Jenny says ‘to secretly discover our sexual selves

As the winter wore on, and the cattle needed feeding
Our den was dismantled; bale by bale, day by day

First the entrance, then the exit, then the small
Cavern, which had been immense, with boys laughter


Saturday, 15 November 2014

Between Form

Left
That was the essence
Once again I had left

Longing
There again the subrogation
Once again I was longing

Free and straight
Hide bound by geometry
Once again I chose divergence

Isolated
Only mist between us
Once again, free of emergence


Friday, 14 November 2014

Power Station

There was hardly any differentiation, between the mist of nature, and the mist created by the warm droplets of the cooling towers

We had left the wharf in Lincoln, good and early, to glide along the canal with the sunrise at our back

I had longed to belong to the water, and here I was on a long boat, a narrow boat, crawling through edgelands countryside, moving freely, yet seemingly always in a straight line

You can still taste the coal; not so much as in the old days, not since the power stations cleaned up their environmental act, but, with a big gulp of breath you can taste the damp black, the sulphur is still there to be chewed upon

Any good mathematician would be able to tell you that the cooling tower walls are parabolas, or another fancy word that I haven’t used since geometry classes at PGS

Any poet would be able to tell you that they are metaphors, for beauty & isolation; and that love always dies, and one day they too will die