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A Day Remembered
Where lady ferns and snakes unfold 
and buttercups in glossy gilt 
outshine the gorseflower's yellow gold 
my spunky youth was freely spilt 
and there our lusty lungs were filled 
with philtres from the lake distilled,  
that day;  
when came that way and nothing loath,  
a boy and girl, two virgins both. 
Sang all that day the loud cuckoo,  
the nosy neighbour's chief of spies,  
but all the world was wooing too 
and had no time for prying eyes;  
for all had better things to do 
than listen to the fool cuckoo. 
My oath,  
they did come both, both girl and boy 
and nothing loath nor were they coy. 
Though love is ever prone to stray,  
not bothering to tell us why,  
we cannot love like yesterday 
and cannot gain from love passed by. 
Yet love's no fly with painted wings,  
a prey to any bird that sings,  
nor toy,  
nor wanton joy but boy! Oh! Boy!  
We came that day and were not coy. 
The lovely, long-remembered day 
dies with a poppy-coloured sun 
‘We'll not forget' the lovers say 
‘and never, never will be done' 
but time untwists the lovers' knot 
and beckons to a loamy spot 
them both 
nor are they loath for time has run 
and time must end what love's begun.
A Dream Of Heaven
In heaven building workers play the lute;  
it's mostly Dowland otherwise they're mute. 
Likewise loudspeakers! London's razed and burned 
like all big cities and the earth returned 
to grateful ploughland. Now the swan and coot 
float over quondam Islington and Peckham. 
Great dozers cleared the suburbs to the root. 
Chained to the cliffs where eagles come to peck'em 
are global-warming preachers and campaigners. 
Wear if you like your ancient jeans and trainers. 
Bright tracks of rail line former motorways;  
there's hissing steam. Prize flower tubs and sprays 
deck every station, climbing roses reaching 
above your dreams of railways pre-Beeching. 
All things you like to do are good, they earn 
a salary. You could arrange to climb 
Mount Everest the first and only time 
with Mallory or if you choose to go 
to Ascot or the Chelsea Flower Show 
the weather is whatever you decide. 
Although in heaven no-one ever died,  
fear not stagnation for, by little changes,  
you get to tread the length of heaven's ranges. 
So gently do the wheels of heaven revolve 
that barely do you know that you evolve 
Like lilies of the field you end your story 
exceeding Solomon in all his glory. 
Your story ends when more cannot be told 
for there are things beyond what words can hold.
A Letter From My Father
'Egyptian Expeditionary Force' 
dated 30 May 1919 
in father's curly writing and green ink 
'Lo they are quiet once again I think,  
most of them realise that they knock their heads 
against a wall of stone'. Whose heads were these?  
What walls of stone? Whatever ailed your pen 
to say so little of so much and then 
so much of such a little 'It would be 
not long before Will Summers is quite well;  
young Fred should soon be home and Edie writes'. 
But eight months since the Turkish Empire fell;  
its army fled you for safe Syria;  
they murdered as they went. Along the way 
they found not safety but a bloody death 
beneath the hooves of Auda Abu Tayi. 
Still round the camp fire tales of Auda ring 
of Will and Fred and Edie who can sing?
A Letter To The Times
Cuckolds, cuckolds all, rejoice!  
For I have stilled the mocking voice 
of that usurper of the nest,  
that burglar with the black-barred chest,  
that paedophile upon the wing:  
the earliest cuckoo of the spring. 
The cuckoo called; I know you hate him;  
I caught and killed and cooked and ate him.
A Life Is Very Like A Holiday
Straight from a winged womb, passport controlled,  
sent down a tunnel which no one gainsays  
we come into a world both new and old  
where things are said and done in unknown ways.  
The language that we hear is honky-tonk;  
the words we speak break every sort of rule.  
The traders drink cassis and blanc de blanc  
as we set off for loaves in morning's cool  
where those magnificents in fire machines,  
the pompiers, at lunchtime take their ease  
in scented shadows beneath evergreens,  
on canvas beds, consuming loaves and cheese  
while gorgeous girls pluck figs and give you one  
and all is over soon as it's begun.
A Picture Of Copacabana Hotel,1939
Flamingo-leggèd parasols incline 
and warm waves ripple in, urbane and calm. 
A happy few, the chic of  '39,  
with tables laid for two beneath a palm 
sip cocktails on the throng-less, thong-less strand. 
Behind them, darkly moulded mountains rise  
but here upon this very verge of land 
with shock-heads feathering the azure skies 
slim, naked palms go swaying down the beach,  
their purple shadows sensuously cast 
like silken garments cooling out of  reach  
for love deferred, forever; all is past. 
We cannot touch nor make the slightest sign 
upon the sands of 1939.
A Street View
Like a lover, lost, forlorn,  
I google up 'Street View' 
to find the town where I was born 
which might be made anew 
or still have those same, happy paths 
my childish knowing knew. 
On a screen I see the place,  
how time is sharp of tooth,  
where I stepped out with early grace  
and flexible with youth,  
unburdened with the memory  
of what my country used to be. 
Memory retains the best:  
the woody hill, the stream,  
things for a tiny time possessed 
that now seem like a dream 
and brief as motes that flash and go 
upon a sunny beam. 
A childish day is like a year;  
my years are like a day.  
What's gone before is all too clear  
for time tears veils away  
and ancient have become the things  
that I hold dear today.
A Topological Triolet For A Friend About To ‘walk Round Everest'.
To walk round anything on earth  
walk any circuit on the ground.  
Just skip around some old tree's girth  
to walk round anywhere on earth:  
the Alps, Mount Everest or Perth…  
It follows since the earth is round:  
to walk round anything on earth  
walk any circuit on the ground.
After Exercise 'iron Maiden'
Our APC's come lumbering off the hills 
where deer go through the air like arrows 
and foxes, furtive, insolent and rash 
come out to saunter by the iron tracks 
that grind relentlessly and gash and groove 
raw trenches for the airborne willow herb,  
dropping to score each twinned and bleeding slash 
in strokes of crimson; marking out attacks 
and feints where armour charged and churned again 
in lines of flowers on the silent Plain. 
Worthy for battle but not good for roads,  
once off the Plain we have to stop and wait. 
I try to get the Mess Fund added up 
where cherry blossom overhangs a gate 
and girls have come to see the uniforms,  
as ever, but… Sweet Helen at the well!  
Here's something special in the way of girls. 
'Five minutes' sighs a corporal. 
'At least an hour' says Sarge and grins at me;  
he wants to know how long. 
Five minutes or a fateful score of years 
hell-bent with fatal Helen. Stop your ears. 
Here is a muse. There's weight in what she brings. 
She brings with her a fist of Grecian spears. 
Beware! You'll choose the burden that she sings 
and be forever deaf to every song. 
So live in quiet places, dull and long 
or be embattled, trampled as you die 
your name blazed out in trumpets where you lie.
Alan Baxter's Funeral
I'm over-dressed, the only one in black 
except the undertakers. How absurd!  
Black as a crow. Black tie, black suit, black mac,  
black shoes and socks although the shirt is white. 
I see that black is never blacker quite 
than when it's painted on a paler bird,  
a penguin say. If I could have a word 
with Alan in the gleaming, flowered hearse  
he'd surely tell that  he'd have preferred 
(just for a laugh and not to be perverse)  
the company of penguins when interred 
in place of mourners and the District Nurse.  
Complacent in its new, red brick and oak 
the chapel gets through eighty dead a week. 
I wonder at the soaring, solid tower… 
of course, a chimney!  'You go up in smoke' 
I hear him say (this was his sort of joke) . 
The priest's a stranger, he has half an hour 
'Change and decay in all around I see' 
and now I have a tear upon my cheek. 
The priest has called him 'Her' instead of 'He'. 
Our lives are beads upon a rosary 
and death unstrings us all, bead after bead. 
Pews of relations sing 'Abide with me' 
without conviction, frowning as they read. 
A little blonde girl cries into her hat;  
no costly monument can equal that. 
He gained no glories and he won no prize,  
his only worth is measured by her eyes. 
So farewell Alan. Well done and three cheers;  
what higher honour than a maiden's tears?
All The World's A Piece
In "The Garden of Evening Mists" 
by Tan Twang Eng I read 
"When the work is done, it is time to leave,  
That is the way of the Tao…" 
I put the book down 
and did something else 
then continued to read:  
"It is incorrect to think of pairs in isolation;  
the BCS state is not simply  
a number of individual states…" 
Seamless it seemed 
for just a moment,  
but I had carelessly picked up 
Stephen Blundell's 
"A Very Short Introduction to Superconductivity" 
instead of "The Garden of Evening Mists" 
and for a moment this conjunction showed 
all the world a piece.
Ancient Armoury
My father's father and my own grew old 
possessing this great house and these home lands 
but now the legacy is ours to hold;  
their weapons worn by war await our hands. 
Their arms and armour, piled up to the roof,  
await the day we put them to the test 
though we it is who have to give them proof. 
Where white plumes wave from every helmet crest,  
on floor and wall our story can be read 
for it is written in these battle hoards:  
the shields that turned the spear and arrowhead,  
belts, tunics, corselets, greaves and good, bronze swords… 
Yet all of this is worthless without men 
who have the will to wield the like again.
Angel
The sun itself would seem to burn less bright 
if we lacked words to praise it:  'Queen of Light' 
effulgence, glorious Mistress of the Day' 
these cannot flatter Ruth; they'll not convey 
a pittance of her grace. I shall despair 
to milk all languages of words and fail at last 
to fit them to the truth for she surpassed 
my power of tongue to tell. I can but say 
that once upon a meadow-sweetened day 
she walked, as lightly as her flowing hair 
flaunted its golden filaments new spun 
of precious metal in the summer sun,  
towards the Vicarage where in a frieze 
of owl-enchanted pines and sombre oak 
beyond the clover fields and tumbling bees,  
among cascading roses and sweet peas,  
was held a party for the County Folk. 
Her party hat she carried and a wand,  
a budding shoot with one exotic bloom 
of preternatural beauty, on a frond 
new-flown from some far isle where great waves boom 
and crush the coral reef to tingling sands. 
The fairest flowers flourish on these strands 
where on a favoured eve, the sea at peace,  
bold Aphrodite tiptoes from the moon's 
long, quavering light upon the wide lagoon's 
night-blackened face to savour such delight 
and fragrances and sigh such sweet alarms 
as an immortal finds in mortal arms. 
But now, upon a racing half a mile,  
young James and Lucy canter on a chase,  
arriving breathless at the very place 
where Ruth, the sun behind her, climbs a stile. 
The ponies start, the children stare amazed 
at fire-ringed Ruth; as if a sacred bell 
had sounded and a magic halo blazed 
upon the goddess stepping from the wave. 
Upon the hush she smiles to break the spell,  
says sorry for her undesigned surprise 
but every word she utters seems to wring 
enchantment from the empty air, to bring 
fresh adoration to their rounded eyes,  
expectant wonder without trace of guile. 
Suppressing laughter though she can but smile 
she gives the stem she carries to the girl 
and magically the costly buds unfurl. 
They hurry home 'An angel spoke to us' 
'Hush, children! Why, whatever is the fuss?  
They're not unusual in the month of May 
upon the Common. Baby is asleep' 
'But Mum, she gave her magic wand away' 
They show the flowers. There are certain deeps 
where banded snakes and coral fishes swim 
in colours wonderful indeed  but dim 
compared with one of these. I do not care 
to count the colours that the flowers wear,  
perfection has no maps; creating them 
has justified Creation. So! Amen!  
A few years pass; the trio meet again 
at Lucy's wedding. Telling how and when 
they met before Ruth horrifies the bride;  
the story is indignantly denied 
'It was an angel. How could it be you?  
She walked out of the sun' James thought so too.
April
The daffodils all wear the paper ruff,  
the six-fold yoke of April, cruel lord.  
They show the colours of their noble lines  
on herald trumpets coloured orange, red  
or sulphur yellow or the palest peach,  
exclusive ensigns of ancestral dye. 
Only the well adorned  
are fit to dandy in his dire court,  
to bend and bow before the shifting winds  
of chancy April;  
who brings hail despite the sun;  
breaks necks despite beauty;  
and of a sudden often lays them low.
Ashley's Book Of Knots
To hitch your waggon to a star,  
to sling aloft a jug or jar,  
to hoist a cow high as a kite,  
cast nooses, throw knots-in-the-bight,  
work sinnets, beckets and garottes 
you look in Ashley's book of knots. 
Want to make a four-leg lashing 
which will never send you crashing?  
Ashley's pages point the way. 
So frap your turns, make fast, belay,  
go marry up the ropes and cords 
that butt your poles and scaffold boards. 
Romancing might not be your lot 
but here is your true lover's knot,  
your cuckold's neck, your running clinch,  
your lantern cords tied inch-by-inch. 
Stoppers, lanyards, bends and hitchings,  
seizings, toggles, splices, stitchings 
all heads and frogs that God allots 
you'll find in Ashley's book of knots.
August
The chaffinch and his cheerful song 
are gone, are gone, are gone, are gone. 
A million times and once again 
he sang as plain, as plain, as plain 
that he had come and only he,  
the master of the holly tree 
and all the garden hereabout,  
to sing the spring and summer out. 
High on the holly tree deployed 
he sang so we could not avoid 
his long, congenial refrain,  
repeated time and time again 
until the summer's wilting hours 
had passed like disregarded flowers.
Bear
Those misbegotten dogs, O how they howl,  
ears up and tense,  
at darker darkness on the midnight's edge,  
at blacker shadows, at a deeper growl,  
beside the forest fence 
where Bruin, ragged as a winter hedge,  
came through the palings with a casual crash 
and now is ripping up the litter bins 
for peelings, mouldered cheese and kitchen trash;  
for bones, rich-smelling rinds and open tins. 
Beyond the barking dogs I know he's there. 
They turn to me encouraged, push too close,  
fly back, droop-tailed, so leaving me to dare 
the infamous, the mighty and morose,  
ill-natured, riled and hungry forest bear  
but he has slipped away, the burly lout,  
the bins all wrecked and all the waste thrown out. 
A bear visit in Brasov, Romania.
Big Bang
Some power, dominion or some prince of light 
fired up a furnace, fierce beyond all measure,  
with melts unknown and cast into the night  
upon the void, a valiant new treasure. 
It burst out with fantastic gluons, quarks 
and spinning leptons in a swelling choir 
of undiscovered things that flew in sparks 
upon a rising thunderhead of fire. 
Time stretched its legs and space uncurled 
its knots and tangles; unsnarled twisted skeins;  
set free its strings to weave another world,  
to mass its stars in gravitating chains. 
Most strange of all: upon a minor shelf 
a piece of this is conscious of itself.
Black
Blacks beyond black there are and more beyond,  
blacks blacker than a lake of bitumen,  
wide firmaments of tar and pitch, despond,  
asphalt infinities that swallow men. 
Infinity is like the widow's cruse:  
however much is given there is more,  
however much is lost there's more to lose 
with never any draining of the store. 
Upon the deep, nigrescent, sly, untold 
and viscous lake where even angels sink,  
a slick of colours and a glint of gold,  
a tint of purple, rainbows black as ink,  
a shining, superficial, luring trick 
puts bait upon the trap to which I stick.
Bluebell Wood
Between the oaks and through the briars 
and underneath the sycamores 
the bluebells run like spirit fires,  
inflaming on the leafy floors;  
besetting lovers hotly yearning,  
lying where the fire is burning. 
Burning!  
Burning, burning all aflame 
with a fire they cannot tame. 
Nettles grow near Bluebell Wood 
and rafters rot beside a wall 
where other lovers came and stood 
their names and faces past recall;  
leaves and mould to nettles turning. 
Turning!  
Turning, turning fallen petals,  
unremembered, turn to nettles.  
It's time that damps the lovers' flame,  
impatient time that cannot stay 
to learn a solitary name 
but lets all passing pass away. 
Blinkered time! But love is ranging 
ever further, ever changing. 
Changing!  
Changing, changing as we lie,  
changing into love gone by.
Bon Appetit
Is yours a table set for one?  
Your feast cannot have long to run. 
A selfish hunger must be small. 
Bon appetit to lovers all!  
Love is a banquet made for two 
so let us quaff each other's wine;  
I'm greedy for your heady brew;  
you sparkle like champagne for mine. 
There is no vintage to excel 
the potent waters of your well 
and since you taste it you must know 
how sweet the blossom that I grow.
Breaker's Yard
This is a charnel house for paid-off ships,  
skid shovels, dozers, bowsers, mobile cranes 
and this trench digger on whose iron lips 
the closing gulp of chalk still shows its stains. 
Like that cadaver on the morgue's cold bench 
whose toes and finger nails were painted red,  
her usual makeup, with a final wrench,  
appealing vainly to us now she's dead.  
Here is a dredger armed with massive screws,  
rain-water flooded, swamped with reeds and sedge;  
an odd inversion that decay should choose 
to grow in it the fen it used to dredge. 
The dragonfly has come. An oily bloom 
floats with the lily in the engine room.
But Is It Art?
The poem is the picture. Reader, what is your opinion; can a mathematical equation be art?  
 Mathematicians often declare there is poetry in their equations. 
With the expenditure of much ink and paper I recently derived the  complete solution of a problem in chemical kinetics: the reaction rate equation for  three irreversible, consecutive reactions. Thus if compound A gives compound B which gives compound C which gives compound D at rates dA/dt=aA, dB/dt=bB and so on, the concentrations of the reactants after time t are given by the equation in the picture. 
  Poetry? How?  
  Mathematicians point to the symmetry; see how a, b and c chase one another round the equation, the repetitive leading diagonal, the lovely gathering of zero's. Brevity too; there are four simultaneous equations implied in one.  
 Inacessible? No more than a Japanese haiku if you do not speak Japanese. 
 I am curious as to your response.
By Mount Ybba Moghrair
Inflaming at the end of night,  
a sudden blaze of hostile light,  
the sun comes darting on the tents,  
the savage spires, the wild ascents 
and barren lands where Moghrair stands. 
No morning call of bird nor dove 
foretells the flight of stars above;  
the distant mountains fade and quiver,  
they ripple on a molten river 
and  morning comes with beating drums. 
A dry wind hurries down the waste;  
it chokes the breath, it shrivels taste,  
the earth is cracked, the body spent;  
a fiery light pours through the tent 
and all thoughts yearn the night's return. 
Can dusk be far? The air turns cool. 
The cold moon rises from a pool 
of airy deeps with purple trails 
of starry gowns and lacey veils 
then like a bride comes eventide.` 
The herder, weary of the sun,  
gives thanks to God the day is done. 
He goes to find the common fire,  
a cup, a song, the heart's desire,  
refreshing rest and talk of rain. 
Dawn brings the deadly rays again.
Cave Painter
Thirty thousand years ago 
my grandfather and yours 
our great, great, great…. 
great raised to the thousand'th power grandad 
painted a cave with lions' heads;  
painted with the sure touch 
of his grand, grand, grand,  
grand raised to the thousand'th power grandson,  
Michael Angelo,  
and his wife said something 
which made him fling down his brush 
and go cut firewood.
Chagrin D'amour
Why do seconds hang and stay 
when my love is far away 
yet every hour will scurry fast 
when she's in my arms at last?  
If only I could lock the door 
through which the precious seconds pour,  
find the lock and fit the key 
to keep them in eternally. 
Is it despite of love that they 
rush off and leave us sad this way:  
left without delight, chagrined 
like swallows in the winter wind. 
If our love were scant and spare 
the absence would be light to bear. 
I would not have it so but yet 
the more I love the worse they get.
Cleopatra
I once knew Cleopatra;  
I let her sail away 
upon her ship from Actium 
to live another day. 
Witch eyes and wishful longing,  
the purple sails and plain,  
that carried us to Actium 
can't carry us again. 
I once knew Cleopatra;  
there's poison in the truth:  
I let her go at Actium 
to find a serpent's tooth.
Corpus Sanctum, St. Elmo's Fire.
Toiling in a tempest full of voices,  
his good ship foundering in stormy steeps,  
the troubled sailor suddenly rejoices  
when holy fire from the masthead leaps. 
New hopes of safety hang upon the sign,  
by god or saint struck in the friendless dark. 
The black ship shines from truck to waterline;  
she dazzles with an incandescent arc. 
Great waves from every side break up the spell 
and fling her angrily upon her back. 
She's beam-ends on and fills with every swell. 
She's going under, drowning like a sack. 
Alas for signs! So much for holy fires 
and all the brilliant promises of liars.
Crash
Massif L'Estérel, rounding a hairpin,  
I came across an old wreck by the road,  
close by a tree, a sports car painted red. 
Allured by speed along the mountain road 
its fearless driver failed to make the bend;  
smashed sideways on the tree it broke in two. 
One gaily coloured half lies upside down 
the rest gapes upright... and the cuckoo calls.
Dark
So there is a party going on,  
somewhere. She opened a door 
and the light streamed out. 
She was a good mother once,  
or twice. Her smile said 
'What, still in the dark? ' 
The light lit in my head,  
light-house like. The door shut. 
The new dark is very dark. 
I cannot find the door.
December
Foul weather, darkness and the winter flu!  
We should be blighted by this triple curse 
but those of us who live December through 
recall it fondly; January's worse. 
When darkness rules, December lights the lights. 
Should these remind us that there was a night 
when from the very highest of the heights 
came down to us a mighty Prince of Light,  
in form a child, from a sovereign throne?  
Whatever was more wonderful than this:  
that he who strides the universe alone 
should come to sanctify us with a kiss. 
So hang your tinsel and your holly too;  
they celebrate this miracle for you.
Deer Hunt
In the distance dogs are baying. 
Silver-masted birches, swaying,  
wrap a double-beaded curtain 
round a fawn that sniffs, uncertain,  
scenting air like tainted water,  
hidden by the silver daughter 
of the woods, her tresses tossing. 
Now the leading dogs are crossing 
closer country, forest-gladed. 
In the sunlight, filtered, shaded,  
dapple-bright, the fawn is losing 
shape and shadow; blurred, confusing,  
random patterns dance, perplexing 
where the dogs are vainly vexing. 
Nosing, questing, canines whetted 
sun-bedazzled, silhouetted,  
on their trail of scent declining 
hungry hunters, baulked, are whining,  
baffled by the prey they're after,  
mystified by whispered laughter 
from the ever-restless shelter. 
Now they're running, helter-skelter,  
on a fresher track they're laying. 
In the distance dogs are baying.
Delphic Oracle
Transported, allocated, hoovered-up,  
scanned by machines, jet-sucked like carpet fleas 
from Gatwick to a dusty strip of Greece,  
we stand like packages among our bags 
and baggages in fabled Attica,  
beset by motor traffic, fumes and noise. 
And so to Delphi in a motor coach. 
No tramping feet of ours shall touch this road;  
we are no bearers of long-shadowed spears,  
leading the oxen here in clouds of dust,  
with arms and armour flashing in the sun 
to warn Apollo's priest of our approach. 
Gone is the gold of Sardis, vainly poured 
by foolish Croesus, ton by precious ton,  
the lion, ingots, girdles of the Queen,  
the basins, mixers, necklaces and all 
the bowls and sprinklers, all refined in gold. 
The gold is gone but now the dollars flash. 
I move away, the guide will urge us on 
to where he gets commission from the sales. 
So from the dusky gypsies selling charms 
and slickly lifting purses in the crowd 
I move away towards a mystery… 
towards a woman in a gypsy dress 
‘Counting the grains of sand on ocean's floor 
I heard your voiceless plea' this woman says 
‘To know the destiny of man, so hear. 
Your fate is to be made by your own hands:  
you shall be superseded by machines' 
and then the Pythoness, if it were she,  
is gone and leaves me speechless, wonderstruck.
Do I Remember The Bluebells?
Yes, I remember bluebells; in the month of May. 
Leaves overhead, unbudding, were still thin. 
The lane was mired in puddles on soft clay,  
reflecting sky and swallows, cumulous,  
clouds white as choir boys and us. 
A timid sun lit up the haze of blue 
beneath the sycamores. A covert wood,  
hemmed in by ditches long, so long, ago,  
was all the cover we were bedded in. 
It was the season that brooks no delay:  
when every flower is pressing into bud 
and life is urgent to mix blood with blood. 
So like a doting dog came love, full tilt,  
and sent us sprawling on this bluebell quilt.
Drains
Let's sing the muted music of the drains,  
drains closely hidden in the wormy earth. 
Only a whispered gurgling betrays 
the laden surges in their secret ways 
that carry off some dinner's last remains 
to Thames or Channel or the Forth of Firth. 
And yet consider how in fair-faced brick 
some bricky, not so fair of face himself,  
beneath ground level built a vaulted arch,  
its Roman segments trowelled with a flick,  
a cavern fit for leprechaun or elf,  
sunk from the sun and from the winds of March. 
They much surpass the craftsman in their worth 
think villa folk but when the ground is shrinking 
and when the drains he laid with toil and care  
now leak along their length or round their girth,  
like some crushed snake, to leave their boudoirs stinking;  
if he forsakes them then?  O what despair!
Epitaph In A Norfolk Churchyard
'Died aged eighteen, too fondly cherished to ever be forgotten' 
Sad destiny, but eighteen years to live 
and laid beneath a split infinitive.
Exile
How black the winter seems despite the snow 
but when you stood beside me, took my hand,  
the journey ended that has far to go 
for we are going to a far off land. 
I dwell where you are, there I make my place,  
beside a mountain or the shifting sea,  
a foreign palace or the commonplace,  
if you are there my home it comes to be. 
My home is not made up of mortar, brick and tile,  
it's where we walk in kind tranquillity;  
it's where you give me hand and heart and smile. 
Clouds hang upon our mountains once so clear 
but skies are bright whenever you are near.
Ex-Wife
At the Plough Inn 
 after the funeral 
 she gave him a certain look:  
 questing, tender, sorrowful, intense 
 and somewhat apprehensive. 
 It lasted long seconds 
 or perhaps a lifetime.
Faces In A Crowd
From face to face my glances fly,  
among a thousand, all unique,  
yet every one the same. 
Mere wooden faces passing by 
on lonely dolls that cannot speak 
and gnomes without a name. 
Your face alone delights my eye 
and promises the cure I seek 
for aches I cannot tame. 
I wait in fever; wonder why 
this helpless yearning leaves me weak 
and you, you are to blame. 
At last you come. My mouth is dry;  
I tremble; I can hardly speak;  
you clasp me like a flame. 
I'll burn forever. As I die 
I shall remember, cheek-to-cheek 
how you were mine to claim.
Fathers' Graves
Within the lych-gate, where man-eating yews 
rise up and brood upon the church roof leads,  
where gravestones slant, where noisome, night bats choose,  
umbrella furled, to hang their alien heads;  
my fathers' monument this cannot be. 
I'll find another and more sacred place 
to sing and dance and shout the pedigree 
of those lamented dead whom I embrace. 
Not like the echoes in the empty porch 
nor squeaking swallows on a dismal day 
nor falling embers from a dying torch 
on splendid stallions they went away;  
hoofbeats to music turned to happy airs 
behind them winter and our present cares.
Father's Printing Shop
A sniff of  printed paper!  
The mind slips far away 
without a stop to father's shop 
and prints of yesterday. 
The leaden letters standing 
in pigeonholed array 
are made to fly by hand and eye 
and set within the tray. 
The Heidleberg is going;  
Pa inks it as he treads;  
remembrance swells the inky smells 
and colours that he spreads. 
He daubs the disc of steel 
a quick besmearing stripe;  
across the wheel the rollers squeal 
and squeeze upon the type. 
I hear the big press going,  
a cacophonous sound,  
with slaps and welts of leather belts 
that drive the wheels around. 
The virgin sheets are printed,  
no longer pure and dumb 
but bearing signs and bold designs 
evocative become. 
There's men and boys with barrows 
and vans by night and day 
but where they go I do not know 
to bear the print away. 
I can't say things  are better 
I can't say things are bad 
but I sit tight, print as I write 
which would astonish Dad.
Field Of Dreams
As evening lets its fragrant shadows slip 
beneath the cedar where we laugh and sip 
the ghost of a player comes out from the corn 
and asks in a low voice  
'Is this heaven? ' 
I was there once, in the evening sun, among the pine cones,  
picnicking on champagne and friendship. 
Seven balloons passed. 
One was all green diamonds;  
another shot with rainbows, bubble blown;  
one precious amber, glowing in the sun;  
a cardinal came next in crimson silk;  
a dark one, witchlike;  
then one in navy-grey, no colour at all 
and one in every kind of blue:  
Cambridge-, navy-, prussian-, rhodamine-,  
ultramarine-, xylenol-, xylidyl-,  
deep sea-, south sea-, shallow sea, wine-dark sea-,  
Oxford-blue and rook-black-ultra-blue... 
to name but a few. 
You could not tell where one blue stopped and another started. 
They all laughed, these balloons, as they passed 
and we all laughed back. 
The owls and the sheep laughed too 
and even the silver satellite 
who had gone up far too high 
and was no longer in this world. 
A thousand heavens of the evening passed 
unmarked, like strangers, all unknown. 
They left unrecognised, alas, moved on,  
wrapped in a moment each and quickly gone.
Fighting Reflections
When something vital in our cooker flunked 
we sadly laid it by the bin outside;  
it looked too bright and new to be defunct 
but there it lay in polished, fallen pride. 
It was the season when the blackbird's airs 
are music to the grateful human ear 
but more like challenges, defiant stares 
and rude affronts to rival birds appear. 
A blackbird, on the cooker's glassy face,  
then saw a rival that he could not rout 
nor cease to fight and that at such a pace 
that fury wore his little body out. 
Against himself though trying as he might 
what bird or man has ever won the fight?
Fill Every Beaker
Like racing horses come the stormy rains,  
with lightning in their hooves and howling breath;  
with snow and hailstones whipping us like chains 
to bring unsheltered men to freezing death. 
Defy the storm; light up the lamps and fire. 
What are we waiting for? Bring out the wine. 
The last dull glimmers of the day retire. 
Now is the time to venerate the vine,  
the only remedy the dark earth knows 
for all the thoughts by which the mind is vexed. 
Fill every beaker till it overflows,  
let every one be jostled by the next. 
Oblivion is how the world began 
and wine's a thing that understands a man.
Finish
I went to bring you things 
of abalone, jade,  
of iridescent wings 
that loving hands have made 
and garments coloured like the sky 
the summer morning brings. 
As sudden as the star 
that lights the sky anew,  
whose burst however far 
is terrible to view,  
there came to me the simple words 
that tore my soul from you.
First Mourning
Souvent dans la nuit 
en entendant la pluie 
je vous verrai ici. 
Often in the night  
listening to the rain 
I shall see you here. 
It is night. It rains 
and I cannot recall the whole of this song 
which I wrote on steamed glass 
that first morning of your death  
on a cold school window. 
The coda is complete. The music ends. 
The final chord is fingered, let  it fall;  
in quieter and stiller depths to sound,  
to deep remoteness, down, to faint recall. 
Ears strain to hold it. Have I got it still?  
No! Time is silence and time has its will.
Food.
I can't remember food 
for I can never say 
what bill of fare we did include  
at lunch the other day 
although I think I understand 
a salad tossed and oiled,  
a steak adroitly frying-panned 
and eggs correctly boiled. 
Cordon bleu can be so trying. 
Is it really worth the troubles,  
this infernal flambé frying,  
stoves and kettles, steam and bubbles?  
I'll remember you, your mood 
and what you wear but not the food.
Fuji Cherry
A dowdy, dwarfish shrub most of the year,  
slow-growing lichen leprous on each bough,  
it flaunts a thousand buds when April's here 
and joyfully proclaims ‘Come, see me now'. 
Before the ranks of summer march this way 
with colours flying, silk on painted silk,  
it holds the eyes so tight they cannot stray 
with petal petticoats  as pale as milk. 
Excess of beauty surely shortens life;  
it has its private purposes and ends;  
it's ever dangerous to bring to wife;  
it causes jealousy between its friends;  
the sooner gone the brighter burns its flame 
but when it dies  our envy turns to shame.
Hope Makes Cowards Of Us All
Your love deterred him: it was worth too much. 
Base metal he was made for, not for gold 
which makes him twice a traitor to himself:  
for dread of spoiling what he loves to touch 
and fear of losing what he longs to hold. 
When you were smiling at him, understand 
that as your summer dress blew in the wind 
hope fled away in cowardly despair 
though wishes hung and every hope was pinned 
on walking with you always, hand in hand. 
So now he finds himself in winter's way. 
In frosty fields he stamps his craven feet 
and feels the price faint-hearted lovers pay 
when longed-for lips are close but fail to meet 
on some delightful, summer-skirted day.
Hoverfly (Eristalis Pertinax)
A micro ounce!  
On air with see-through wings   
I sit or bounce. 
Wings whiz! Flight ace!  
I want to be and then I'm in 
another place. 
Blink! Zip! I'm gone. 
Bare is the space 
I hung upon.
In Memorium, Peter Woodrow, The Good Shepherd
Thorns and nettles guard the fruit 
along the paths he kept. 
He said that they were ‘Fleet of root' 
but thorns and nettles crept 
into his fields to spread and sprout 
when Peter Woodrow's light went out. 
‘A man who wanted' said the priest 
‘to live for evermore' 
No, no my friend, not in the least!  
He simply meant to draw 
from endless time without an end 
sufficient days to make and mend. 
A minute from that miser's heap 
to patch a ragged coat,  
to fix a fence for fattened sheep,  
to clean a ditch and moat 
where water birds and minutes scoot 
and everything is fleet of root.
Lakenham Bridge
It's a fair drop below and the water is slow 
where Lakenham bridges pass over the streams 
of the Yare and the Tas; where a fisherboy dreams 
of the great fish that go in the deep, lazy flow. 
The bricks are hard blue for the railway runs through  
so they lie fair and square in a permanent mortar. 
There is hope in the air and a float on the water.
Last Love
One gave to you the touch of children's hands,  
another brought you laughter and a song 
but now my footprints on the sea-washed sands 
mark out with yours the stretch you walk along. 
What measures time? A globe of glass well spun,  
with extra skill made narrow at the waist 
through which the grains of time untimely run 
to carry off all things with too much haste. 
No! Time's true measure is the human heart  
that longs to beat against a loving one 
for time is only lovers kept apart, 
as winter is the lack of summer sun. 
The next tide scours our footprints from the beach
of time and tide; love lies beyond its reach. 
Lend Me The Love You Cannot Give
O lover mine, if Venus can't complain 
that her high altar which she set in you 
I ever did neglect nor take in vain,  
why have you have cast me out and said adieu?  
See what a thing is made of love so whipped 
and left alone to live or die on air:  
as fleshless as the bones left in the crypt,  
as tattered as the relic shrouds they wear. 
Love cannot take its sustenance from showers 
nor live on berries where the birds have stripped,  
nor like the swift snatch flies from airy towers 
nor fly at all with wings so cruelly clipped. 
The love you cannot give me you could lend 
for love is not a heavy coin to spend.
Life, Cricket And Everything
On a wicket life is played 
with the bat your father made. 
You know cricket, bats get frayed. 
So new handle, then new blade,  
next new handle, next new blade... 
same old bat granddad begat. 
How cricket scores with metaphors!  
I'm a bat? Well fancy that!  
Perusing more this cricket lore 
with faith unshaken: life I see 
should not be taken personally.
Lost Princess
A desert prince set on a hill 
a pleasure palace for his bride. 
The scents of araby hang still 
on ruined walls, on every side. 
With oils of violet and rose 
he had them knead the pliant clay. 
Laid here were bricks with tuberose 
and there with lillium they lay. 
The window sockets gape in air 
with essences of long ago. 
With orange flower and lavender 
and narcissus the four winds blow. 
A moment lingering they steal 
a trace of scent but leave it there,  
these vagrant winds, remembering 
that she preferred the desert air. 
They stay a moment and restart 
their endless journeys round the earth;  
they whisper of a prince's art 
that failed to hold a woman's heart.
Lotus
A clear stream falls from hills to feed a lake. 
It leaves its boulders and its polished stones 
and runs to reedy depths, green, brown, opaque 
to lie on mud, decaying plants and bones 
where sucking lampreys lurk and bony fish 
stare up towards their silhouetted prey. 
As coins fall in a fountain with a wish 
seeds freshly drop when dead heads shake and sway,  
down to that damp of black and hairy roots 
where genesis demands to have its way. 
A sacred message from this pit of love 
the lotus sends upon its pale, green shoots;  
its warm and lovely buds unfold above 
and with a blush their consummation make 
which like a lover's dream comes in a lake
Love Song
You little, bright-eyed wanton,  
who lately left me smiling,  
of love you have convinced me 
with every kind beguiling 
but so convince me every day 
for love is wont to slip away 
with swifts and swallows flying,  
to leave a lover all aheap 
and everybody crying. 
I see the garden where you are 
and feel perpetual pining 
to search the heavens in your eyes 
and count the stars there shining. 
At night I see a desert place 
with stars above its sandy face 
with you and me reclining 
though not a star is half as bright 
as you and me entwining.
Lovers' Flower
What's the lover's favourite flower?  
Wild gorse is as good as any,  
golden blossoms, ten-a-penny 
every month and every hour. 
What's the reason? Love's in season 
when the gorse comes into flower:  
every month and every hour.
Love's Long Absence
Though winter is a gaoler it will bring,  
to all its prisoners, relief assured 
for winter dies and leaves another spring 
but your love's absence is an age of ice 
and memory a meagre squirrel's hoard,  
misplaced or mouldered, carried off by mice,  
too insubstantial fare for times so hard. 
The mountain bird that's feathered winter white 
that haunts the snows and icy ridge unmarred 
finds joy and comfort on his windy height 
and bobs with pleasure among rocks and drifts. 
I, like a bear can only fall asleep 
in some dark cave until the ice-age lifts 
to dream of summer days and your sweet gifts.
Lute Song
Now my lady lays her down 
in a silk and satin gown,  
in a robe of thread so fine 
it enfolds her heart with mine. 
Though this might be songful art 
I'd rather we were not apart. 
There are enough within her eyes 
of stars to light the empty skies. 
Surely one or two I see 
that my lady wished for me 
but the Milky Way entire 
could not end my lone desire.  
I would lull her with delight 
were I there with her tonight 
sending back to sleep the lark 
when he comes to end the dark. 
Soon he'll sing this glad refrain 
'Now your love is back again'
M104 The  'sombrero Hat' Galaxy
There is a jeweller older than the night,  
with precious stones his velvet tray is spread;  
his satin sack holds diamonds of delight,  
the emerald and the ruby, green and red 
and other gems with  strange, outlandish name,  
like here: M104 Sombrero Hat. 
Sing sacred choirs! Sing out magnificat!  
Sing silent symmetry of stars aflame!  
Some smith has wrought within his fiery forge 
this crucible to cast a wondrous thing. 
We see the sparks fly in the blackened gorge 
but cannot hear the mighty hammers ring 
nor do we know the aim of these designs 
we only see how the creation shines.
Midnight Mass
Soft airs there were among the Devon hills,  
soft redstone and the softest ring of bells. 
The pagan robin bosun-piped his trills 
from ancient rafters where the deathwatch dwells,  
his finger-feathers fluttering on the beams 
above the candled crib and carolled choir. 
Ah! Those who sang sing only now in dreams 
though never could a living dream aspire 
to such a benediction in the night. 
Beloved tunes and voices fade away 
while robin carols in the candlelight,  
lamenting for his lost midsummer day 
and we for joys we barely recognise,  
soon snatched away from unaccustomed eyes.
Mind Poise
I came across a bridge among the trees;  
beyond belief it stretched across the seas. 
As slender as a web in quick ascent,  
it soon ascended to the firmament. 
I mounted step by step and on the way 
the earth beneath it vanished quite away,  
diminished to a purple spot in space 
and then to nothing, gone without a trace. 
The bridge itself dissolved and in the void,  
with every solid thing strayed or destroyed,  
I stood in emptiness without a rung,  
all foothold gone, where vast oblivion hung. 
Annihilated all, save only me,  
a new, bewildering reality.
Missing The Bird
'Did you sleep well? ' my good Norse host enquired. 
Sleeping, sleeping, dreamless, uninspired,  
unconsciously  I passed the splendid night. 
Auroras wove above with elvish light,  
warping and wefting, dipping dye on dye. 
with flying fingers and a painter's eye… 
Ah! How I would have watched however tired. 
Beneath my roof he slept. The night was mild,  
quite melted by the thrush's notes which flowed 
quicksilver through the window. Wistful, wild,  
the music filled the pillowed ear and strode 
beyond the pales of poetry. Unheard!  
Deep in the dark of dreamland fast interred 
my honoured guest forever missed the bird.
Mother
The rose that scents the summer day 
and flaunts her colour to the bees 
knows nothing and has naught to say;  
her only talent is to please. 
With fickle blooms and ready claws 
she wanders where the rough wind blows;  
her children left with hips and haws 
abandoned in the wild hedgerows. 
She leaves themn there without a sigh,  
in swollen, orange bulbs they lie 
but like their mother, by and by,  
they grow to flatter every eye.
Mrs. Winter's  Jump
Over the stile, the sticks and the stumps 
goes Mrs. Winter over the jumps;  
clearing all the ditches, flooded or dry,  
shot from a longbow and feathered to fly. 
Follow the hound that follows the deer;  
jump every fence and swallow your fear,  
up on a horse that is bred from the blood 
with a clatter, scatter, spatter of mud!  
Over the fence at desperate pace!  
Fie to the fox! It's Winter I chase. 
I'll catch her yet if I get a good start 
but she's up, away, away with my heart.
Multiple Sclerosis
She comes in slowly, hanging on the air. 
'MS' I'm told 'She's only thirty-one'. 
They park her gently till her name is called. 
She's pushing on the stick. Can she get up?  
Uncertainly she rises; dials whirl;  
the altimeter spins; horizons fall;  
the ground revolves; the airspeed clock goes mad. 
Her head is high. By God, she's bound to stall 
but up she gets and makes toward the desk. 
I watch. She's leaving; careful with her things,  
she mounts a tricycle and slowly checks 
the brakes, trim, undercarriage, radiator, guns,  
or so it seems to me. Then chocks away!  
Beyond the tarmac enemies await 
but out she rolls; intrepidly she flies 
to join The Few who dare the dangerous skies.
Mutually Assured Destruction Or Notes On A Reptilian Taboo
If rattlesnakes bite you or me 
it's very likely R.I.P. 
This comes as a surprise... but if 
he bites himself a snake's soon stiff 
moreover should he bite a mate 
it suffers too that certain fate. 
And yet for mates the snakes do fight 
but only wrestle, never bite. 
They'll gladly have a go at you 
but biting peers is quite taboo,  
a rule that snakes should never flout 
for lines that do so soon die out. 
Thus evolution by selection 
protects a snake at preconception.
My Lady Butterfly
Are you a dark moth from a silk cocoon,  
the flower wanderer of the midnight sky 
who drinks from honeydew beneath the moon?  
Not so, you are my Lady Butterfly. 
When we were straying from our proper course,  
swept all awry by wanton blasts of air 
you fluttered on your wings of subtle force  
to find your flower and alighted there. 
Whatever bloom you choose, whatever field,  
your presence makes its beauty  twice as much;  
whatever plant with budding petals sealed 
is glad to open to your gentle touch. 
Ah! Lucky me that you have come to sip 
my nectar and to take it from my lip.
Newlyn Moor
The bracken and the mountain ash 
cleave to an open shaft;  
a dropped stone makes a distant splash 
as if a miner laughed 
to find somebody come to see 
and listen by the wild ash tree. 
The wind sounds out the high-strung wire 
across the tin mine moor. 
Tremayne, Trevelyan, Tregire 
have left for richer ore. 
Their names are cut on lonely stones 
to mark their foreign, Cornish bones. 
The miners' digging days are done;  
down are the walls they built. 
There's no more metal to be won 
beneath the spoil they spilt 
but where they spat their apple seeds 
green apples grow among the weeds.
Nocturne
Do you remember, white, white maid 
how pretty was the couch we laid?  
Oh! Call it heather, call it ling,  
bare on the naked heath we'd cling,  
close to the very noon of night,  
the summer moon in roundest light 
atop the trees while we, beneath,  
in shadows black upon the heath,  
like silver trout in some dark pool 
each took the other one to school. 
The summer moon, her face all red 
from watching us, lit up our bed;  
a friend who never hid her face 
nor gave away our hiding place.
North Norfolk Coast
The birds fly in and we are all bewitched 
by fleeting feathers, dazzling or dull;  
by bluethroat, bunting, bustard we are twitched,  
by grosbeak, golden goose and glaucous gull. 
‘County folk' (but Kensington and Chelsea) :  
four-wheel drive, binoculars and Barbours;  
common, shoreline, Blakeney to Selsey;  
congregate weekends at coast and harbours. 
Rare visitors among the local flock:  
a breeding pair of Japanese. The hen 
is inconspicuous but on the cock 
a camera which cost him many yen. 
Among a kilted claque of Highland Scots 
a leathered Tyrolean has been seen,  
a curl-toed Grecian (white rump and red spots) ,  
sarong clad waders and a Pearly Queen. 
Such birds of passage thrill us all to bits:  
the Mussulman, the baggy-trousered Turk,  
black-feathered orthodox (or bearded)        tits,  
the pied gum-chewer (lesser Yank or quirk) . 
Instinctive urges that they must obey 
impel them to our bare, sand-blasted strands,  
the varied vagabonds from far away,  
the twitching anoraks from Metro-lands.
Nothing Amiss
Anemones are bitter to the tongue,  
like flattery, though to the eye they're sweet,  
a brisk confetti that the winds have flung 
to grow at random all about our feet. 
Much grander plants can please with looks or scents 
but fail to charm us if we touch or chew;  
for that which satisfies us in one sense 
can seem deficient from another view. 
In you I find all qualities accord  
or if there be deficiencies unguessed,  
harmonious notes have need of some discord 
to give embellishment to all the rest. 
Yet we have hours when nothing is amiss;  
time cannot flow to higher points than this.
Nothing Travels Faster Than Money.
In fallen Crete did Captain Hildyard die,  
or so they said, although he was not dead 
but, living as a fugitive, he tendered 
a cheque to hire a boat, at worst a raft,  
to flee somewhere that had not yet surrendered. 
His bank in England then received the draft 
some weeks before he set off in this boat 
when no one knew that he was still alive 
to spend this money and to get afloat. 
The bosses at the bank then phoned his mum 
to ask about the signature, the date 
with figures adding to a tidy sum;  
doubtful they were when, from a seat of war,  
capricious fortune, gambling with fate,  
sent them this cheque to be referred to drawer. 
The draft was honoured I am glad to say 
though Hildyard's mother fainted quite away 
and Captain Hildyard crossed the wine-dark sea 
to join his regiment of yeomanry.
November
November, summer's cooling ember,  
is a death; you cannot blow 
into its heart and make it glow. 
November woods, in summer's ashes,  
dressed in gold and russet splashes,  
strip their clothes, show every member 
naked in the blinding, low,  
unwarming sun or else they blow 
with rougher winds than we remember. 
Leaves and flowers, down they go;  
the dark is here; there will be snow. 
The spring will come; I know, I know. 
and yet there is no switch to throw 
to make November go and so 
we coldly pass into December.
O Mistress Mine
I called my muse to book;  
she would not stay 
but stamped a pretty foot 
and went away. 
O mistress mine you sing 
then disappear 
and all my envy bring 
to some new ear. 
You leave an empty vault,  
a desert dry,  
an ocean sick with salt,  
a bare goodbye. 
Where lovers meet, she knows,  
is journey's end 
and that is where she goes 
to meet a friend. 
Her pleasure cannot start 
without my pain 
for we must be apart 
to meet again.
Old Lady
This is the time of Michaelmas blue daisies,  
of frosts not far ahead and a late sun,  
of a small, grey lady pausing, slowly walking,  
who loves the long, blue daisies,  
the late sun and the frosts not far ahead. 
So she comes singing past the church and talking. 
She's scattering her verses, one by one. 
Like dust they dance the long, reflected trail 
that glances off each casement in the sun. 
They join with frankincense and galingale,  
the smoke of silver censers, swayed and spun,  
with sweet flag, cinnamon and lemongrass. 
Too old, these casements, to be worth the mending,  
they yet flash sunlight to a distant pass 
where one who watches reads what they are sending 
and learns her songs which never have an ending.
Old Men Are Never What They Seem To Be
I watched an old man finishing a chair 
new-made of beech from some wind-fallen tree 
with dowels and tenons all set fair and square;  
no nail, no screw, entirely metal free. 
You might have thought pure timber was his trade. 
Beneath the seat he stamped his name, the date 
and sat to sample what his hands had made. 
I fell to wondering upon its fate 
when frail of worm or rot, bound up with wire,  
it failed to hold against some fat man's weight 
and found its destiny upon the fire,  
among the morning ashes in the grate. 
Old men are never what they seem to be 
and what's to come lies in their history.
On A Long Ski Draglift
The sun burns bright; the snow glares back 
from slopes that dazzle as we pass 
then change to unexpected black,  
to shadows seen through darkened glass. 
All night the moon was on the frost;  
stars danced upon the shining snow;  
in careless merriment they lost 
their jewellery, flung to and fro. 
Now gem-strewn, glinting, diamond-laced,  
turned shadow still in sun's full blaze,  
the black snow flashes, crystal-faced,  
and scintillates with coloured rays. 
The crushed snow creaks; skis cut and hiss 
but we are silent, lost in this.
On Queen Elizabeth's Diamond Jubilee
When our lives were long of lease 
and our prospects were alarming 
she was with us, war and peace. 
When the whole world was rearming,  
when the bombs began to fall,  
when there seemed no hope at all 
she was there without a fuss,  
in a uniform like us. 
Shepherds never built a fold 
that could guarantee their sheep;  
every hurdle can be holed. 
Round the realm assassins creep,  
bringing terror and defection,  
vexing to a sovereign's sleep. 
With a long and wide affection,  
sixty years and fifty nations,  
she deserves our celebrations. 
Bring on flowers, banners, bunting,  
marching soldiers, big ships hooting,  
parties, galas, airplane-stunting,  
bonfires, fireworks, gun-saluting,  
flags aloft on poles and gables,  
bands of brass with fifers fluting,  
pies and jellies, trestle tables,  
oxen roasters, sausage fryers,  
revelry, celestial choirs 
and everything that she desires.
On Something I Cannot Name
There is a big orchestra and a chorus. 
We hear a gentle tap on the side drum 
then castanets and the sound of a fife. 
Ensuite the piccolo comes in. 
The strings sweep on to make a swelling tide,  
blazed with a splendid trumpet. 
Voila! The organ bellows out and drowns it all. 
Boom! The cannon is fired. 
Dust falls from the ceiling 
and the chorus begin a paean of praise to Aphrodite. 
The side drum and castanets are heard again,  
fading gradually  into silence 
broken by a slight snore and 
the sound of skylarks singing.
On Stanford Training Area,
Stand-to at dawn! Our well dug-in platoon 
watch down their sights. The sky is turning green,  
like coral sands beneath a calm lagoon 
through sunny, waveless waters dimly seen,  
the deeps of emerald, the pools of jade;  
cold, dawnlight pools in which the morning steeps 
its muddy cloths in every dyeing shade. 
Along the forest ride the morning creeps 
and catches on some madcap enterprise 
a heavy-footed hare who halts and squints 
and sniffs at us in comical surprise. 
Beside a pit, long dug for sharp-edged flints 
by other warriors, withered now to bones,  
we lie in company with roots and stones.
On The Old Silk Road
Old man 
The bells are sounding out the camel's tread. 
I hear the mules stamp and the iron shoe 
ring on the wheels. The eighteen hills ahead 
await the caravan; the stars wait too. 
The Gate of Demons is unbarred again;  
the road is open to the camel train. 
Young man 
Old camel-puller, turn away your face,  
the evening star no longer beckons you. 
A diesel engine sets a better pace.  
Your final stage is done. The sky turns blue.  
The pink, Celestial Alps announce the dawn.  
You and your midnight stages are outworn.  
Old man  
Without a guide the Gobi is a grave,  
the Lob is an illusion. Take a guide,  
young sir, upon the road and let him save  
and keep you when the stony ways divide.  
Don't follow melon skins across the sands.  
Beware of voices in the empty lands.  
Dust devils dog the day; they twist and turn,  
they twirl in empty coats of sand and stones  
but traveller be warned: these devils burn  
to cloak their nakedness in flesh and bones.  
They haunt the blackest stages of the night  
with shadows, lures and with uncanny light.  
Among the silent dunes a voice sings out,  
you hear it calling urgently, a shout,  
a cry for help, a snatch of demon song;  
ignore it, whip the caravan along;  
to seek it is to leave your bones out there  
with those who followed voices in the air.  
Young man  
Your eyes are on a lost, outmoded way.  
Old man, forget the desert's evil hours,  
the thirsty road, the caravanserai;  
the Eighteen Hills are now beyond your powers.  
The time has come for you to be abed  
when constellations swing above your head.  
'The iron shoe' the brake of a waggon wheel. 
‘Camel-puller' old colloquialism for a Gobi carter.  
‘The evening star no longer beckons you' desert stages were travelled 
 by night.  
‘Celestial Mountains' a range of mountains in the Gobi.  
‘Gate of Demons' a gate of the Great Wall of China.  
‘Lob' a mysterious desert of bad reputation lying to the North of Tibet.  
‘Follow melon skins' it was said that a trail of melon skins led to the oasis of Turfan.  
‘The Eighteen Hills' was a stage on the Silk Road.
Pentecost
Sad for something that you held 
a moment once and lost,  
in all the world unparalleled,  
a fleeting pentecost,  
a revelation briefly gained,  
too like a dream to be retained?  
I share with you that history,  
that joy without a cause,  
the unexpected mystery 
that boundless love is yours;  
an insight from another earth 
esteeming us beyond our worth. 
Then, like a song we might have  sung 
but cannot find again,  
words lost upon the tip of tongue,  
like colours made by rain,  
it's gone; though we may clutch and  claw,  
to traces, hints, to bliss no more.
Pheasant Shoot At West Harling
Upon the painted meadows contented cattle graze. 
The distant, towered churches brood on half a million days. 
Black Carr is dank and sedgy but Micklemoor is high 
so here the ancients settled and here their bones still lie. 
The beaters whack the branches; the sportive springer runs;  
they drive the tribe of pheasants to the boding line of guns. 
Wrapped in the reeds by Roman Wood, the stag stands in alarm;  
his ears pick up a warning, his nose the scent of harm. 
The duck seeks hidden ditches, the fox makes for his lair;  
the pigeon flies across the sun and dodges like a hare. 
The pheasant sounds his brassy bell, he whirrs his wings to fly 
and every ear seeks out his voice and every gun the sky. 
Across the heath and forest, six thousand years ago,  
their fathers' dress was formal when hunting they would go. 
In buckskin boots and sable, with feathers in their caps,  
in moleskins and morocco they were well apparelled chaps. 
Now pheasants do require it, when coming to be killed,  
that turn-out should be proper, be it corded, tweed or twilled;  
the greasy mark of tractors, a trace of ferret stool 
and hints of dogs and ditches bother nobody at all.
Plato And Aristotle.
‘I was told by Socrates' 
said Plato once to Aristotle 
‘Something called the axolotl 
dwells beyond uncharted seas' 
'Disbelieve it, my dear Plato 
surely you've been at the bottle 
down at the Old Daub and Wattle 
where they sing of the potato 
and the mythical tomato 
soaring over the castrato 
who can hit the highest C's'. 
'Rub me down with  spikenard' 
said Plato since it scanned so well. 
'Rub me down and rub me hard;  
you're a thinker, I can tell' 
With a sniffle and a snottle 
Aristotle knocked the dottle 
from the briar pipe he vented,  
Smoking hadn't been invented  
but the future is portented 
by such mighty minds as these 
who philosophise with ease.
Public House
I know a place that's hung with hops and rose,  
where honey bees and dusty blackbirds doze 
before a doorway where clematis falls;  
where sundry spears and rugs hang on the walls 
of smoky-yellow lime and horsehair mix,  
age-toughened oak and bits of Roman bricks. 
A single flower at table, nothing rare,  
but otherwise the board is plain and bare. 
There's harrowing and harvest corner talk 
by dusty men of tractors, soil and chalk. 
The kitchen master knows his herbs and sauces,  
the meat and fishes proper to all courses,  
the custards, creams and the exotic spices,  
the currants, damsons and fresh apple slices;  
and he can steam a pudding in a tub 
and marry marmalade to syllabub. 
The summer fireplace is a flowery blaze 
until the autumn and the gloomy days 
when weary winter beats an icy path 
across the threshold to the cheerful hearth. 
In World War Two some people had the face 
to come in aeroplanes and bomb the place. 
In 50,406 and 793 
it lodged some fierce invaders from the sea 
who did not know, for they were foreign then,  
that in a while they would be Englishmen 
whose greatest pleasure is to enter pubs 
and dine on marmalade and syllabubs. 
You too, dear reader, might be glad to know 
how you could get there. I'll not tell you. So!
Relic
Your garden now is empty, barren ground,  
not desolate of flowers but of you. 
A ring I gave you was there lost and found 
among the leaves that fitful breezes blew. 
Today I wish that twist of gold still there,  
a buried treasure in the soil you tilled 
when scents of roses floated on the air;  
where you watched stars when busy days were stilled. 
It does not rot; far better had it stayed,  
a little crock of gold by fortune spared 
for that small acre where the gift was made,  
a lasting relic of a pleasure shared. 
Yes, there are things, delighting us when found,  
that would be better left beneath the ground.
Rolling Stone
A round stone rolled, I reached and picked it up,  
a polished piece of flint, of water's milling;  
a slinger's stone to hurl with thong and cup,  
whirling till it whizzes, wildly willing 
to fly bee-buzzing on its devil's way. 
So old a stone laughs transience to scorn. 
Oh ancient one, I carried you away 
to where my patio is cracked and worn 
and there I meant to drop you on the grass 
but clumsily I dropped you on the stones 
and shattered you to flinty shards of glass  
for time had burdened you with brittle bones. 
But time can polish every piece anew 
and what's a meagre million years to you?
Route March
'Left, right, left, right! ' the sergeant booms 
along the lazy river's edge 
where lassies come to pick the blooms. 
Through meadowsweet and grassy plumes 
we march and through the muddy sedge. 
'Left, right, left, right! ' the sergeant booms. 
'You soldier boys are thin as brooms' 
the lovely, lissom girls allege 
where lassies come to pick the blooms. 
'Show us the casements of your rooms;  
we'll climb in by the window ledge' 
'Left, right, left, right! ' the sergeant booms. 
The roses woven on the looms 
of summer fade upon the hedge 
where lassies come to pick the blooms. 
'In double time! ' The pace foredooms 
our chance of making further pledge 
'Left, right, left, right! ' the sergeant booms 
where lassies come to pick the blooms.
Sappho Accuses Aphrodite
It gladdened eyes; its blossom fed the bee;  
the sweetest apple ripened in the sun 
upon the tip, the topmost of the tree,  
and hung there still when harvesting was done. 
Forgotten? No, but not a man aspired,  
until the goddess came to shake her free,  
to touch the apple that was most admired. 
I'm sorry, Mother dear, but don't blame me. 
Blame Aphrodite; she has sent a youth,  
as slender as the stripling apple tree,  
to shake me with desire. You know the truth:  
with love she traps us women, wantonly;  
against this creature there is no defence;  
we must surrender until love relents.
Sappho And Cleis
I have a daughter golden as the flowers 
and beautiful as budding boughs in May. 
I would not part with her for all the towers  
of Lydia  nor what in gold they weigh. 
My mother told me that when I was born 
the girls had purple bands to bind their hair. 
I've lately seen such coloured headbands worn 
and I would get one but I know not where. 
The fiery poppy and the cornflower blue,  
forget-me-nots and herbs the shepherds find,  
O daughter mine, are all I have for you 
to plat and weave upon your head and bind… 
but little Cleis, here in Sappho's rhyme 
you hair is handsome to the end of time.
Sappho Appeals To Aphrodite
Immortal Aphrodite, I'm alone. 
Come shield me from the anguish and despair 
that overwhelm your Sappho, overthrown. 
I sense swift wings that bring you through the air 
and those old questions in your gracious smile:  
you'll ask me what has gone awry again 
and who it is that you must reconcile. 
My mad heart flutters in my breast till then. 
‘Someone has spurned you, Sappho? Tell me who,  
for she shall love you though against her will 
and if she flees then she shall soon chase you 
and what you heart desires I shall fulfil.' 
Come Aphrodite, come to me, descend,  
and be my ally, counsellor and friend.
Sappho At The Mirror
Before her mirror, in the morning light,  
she finds some greyness in her silken hair 
where all until this dawn was glossy bright;  
she weeps to see the marks of passage there. 
Soft Dawn, the midwife to the darkened earth,  
delivers the new day when shadows fade 
but never learns what this new thing is worth 
for she is gone before it's fully made. 
Now Sappho sees that Dawn, who brings the sun,  
goes with the shadows when they make their flight,  
fades in the very glory she's begun,  
dies and dissolves in her created light;  
she sees that death is evil, that the gods agree 
and for themselves choose immortality.
Sappho Sings To Anactoria
Some like to see the horseguards wheel and dash 
across a wide plain, bright with tossing plumes,  
when colours fly, when arms and armour flash. 
But some prefer a cloud of cherry blooms 
when happy April, bridesmaid of the sun,  
adorns herself to show that spring's begun. 
While others say a fleet of sail at sea 
surpasses any other scenery. 
Although I love the troopers, cherries too,  
my favourite, Anactoria, is you. 
Your laughter thrills me, sweet as any flute;  
I catch a glimpse of you and I am mute;  
I sweat and tremble and I catch my breath;  
your flame burns in me; I am close to death.
Sappho Sleeps Alone
The moon sets; the stars fade; the midnight owl has flown;  
the hours creep and she's afraid for Sappho sleeps alone. 
She fears there is some shallow maid, some wretched girl unknown,  
some artful charmer who has made poor Sappho's love her own;  
so Sappho languishes, betrayed, forlorn and left to moan. 
In all the world I love you best and yet we sleep apart;  
come tell me I am dispossessed and let me make a start 
upon a solitary quest for I long to depart,  
to leave the dark earth unredressed and stay my aching heart. 
At last you come! Look in my face; I'm burning with desire. 
Your eyes are bright and full of grace but Sappho is on fire. 
Unfurl your loveliness, unlace, and let your love be strong 
and lingering as we embrace and night be twice as long.
Sauna Thoughts
Grown smooth, significant of shape and old 
wind-blasted granite slowly turns to sand 
in polar valleys where the air, so cold 
that even glaciers cannot lay a hand,  
preserves the ancient corpses lying there;  
ten thousand years in every frozen stare. 
Here, hot enough to broil an egg for tea,  
the sauna timer drops a slow, thin stream 
of silver sand from some long-vanished beach 
where silent swimmers, diving from the gleam 
of razor teeth and from the horny reach 
of tyrant lizards fled and fled again,  
surviving all; shape-shifting into men. 
Time and again extinction passed them by 
and now there's us. I sweat and wonder why.
Sea Palling
Today the sea is like a silver cat. 
She flips her tail along the yellow strand 
her rasping tongue has licked until it's flat. 
You see the claw marks rippled on the sand 
where she has stretched herself towards the dune. 
The cat is languid but she cannot rest;  
she purrs a sea-cat's song, a gentle tune 
but on a winter's night,  
when surging tides and storming waves contest 
in black and baneful fight to drown the moon 
she leaps for fear with madness in her breast;  
claws at the dunes until they cannot stand;  
the sea-wall slipping, she slinks overland,  
foam showing white where she has hissed and spat,  
her teeth and tides a-ripping. Tiger cat!
Sexual Favours For Apples
I have done sexual favours for apples;  
now buds are pregnant, swelling on the boughs. 
In May the heavy-coated bumble grapples 
the frilly-knickered apple which allows 
her and the honey bee to gain its favours 
but May was chill and so they lost their chance 
to fill their honey bags with apple flavours 
for fear of rainstorms and the hailstones' dance 
which blew the blossom all to smithereens. 
Worcester Pearmain, Cox's Orange Pippin,  
May is the month these apples swap their genes;  
when honey bees and bumbles come to dip in 
the little, luscious lips they love to lick 
but if you get the softest sable tip in 
a water-colour brush will do the trick.
Ships Pass In The Night
I want to sing of love but sorrow comes 
then songs of sorrow turn to love again. 
We are at sea on passages apart,  
night-passing once, bathed in a mutual thrill 
of the swell and the wash and the ships'  lights,  
the thud of hearts and the beating of engines. 
Our wave-washed meeting over and erased 
you became a dot on the horizon;  
the morning's vast, erratic ocean emptied. 
Far out from land there flies a lonely dove,  
does that mean harbour, confluence and love?
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
We listened in a small hotel 
to ‘Smoke gets in your eyes'. 
The sksylark never sang so well 
by white cliffs and blue skies 
and where the river meets the sea 
we came together, you and me. 
Beyond the river and the sea 
the mighty ocean rolls 
but there is an infinity  
that spreads beyond the poles,  
that time can never spoil nor spend:  
a stream of love without an end. 
The sea has moods and motions 
the old seafarer knows;  
as he can read the oceans 
I read the ebbs and flows,  
the thoughts and feelings, every trace,  
that move upon your darling face.
Soldiers On Parade
Some preferred the piping men 
and some preferred the drums. 
There's one who wears a tiger skin.  
Magnificent he comes.  
With tum-te-tum and tum-te-tum 
I skipped along beside the drum. 
I preferred the whirling sticks,  
the polished leather gear,  
the tiger skin, the braided coat,  
the splendid volunteer 
whose beating drum aroused our cheers 
and tum-te-tum for mother's fears. 
War came to the piping men 
and to the drums came war 
which flayed them like a tiger skin 
with bloody tooth and claw;  
with tum-te-tum and tum-te-tum 
they marched away to kingdom-come.
Song For Soldiers
You want a medal? Get along!  
OK! So you must have a gong. 
But if you think your life is dear  
then never, never volunteer. 
I hope that's clear. 
You volunteered? Now in the dust 
with everything cocked up or bust,  
with no-one to defend your rear 
you'll get the blame, you infanteer,  
when death is here. 
Justice? Blind! Her sword is just 
to keep secure the upper crust. 
If for trial you now appear 
as like as not she'll volunteer 
to disappear.  
Those who peddle for a fee 
your supposed infamy,  
did they ever serve? No fear!  
Where the winds of battle veer,  
they're nowhere near.
Spring
The air announces it: the coming Spring. 
Bring me my canvases. Break out a chest 
of paints and brushes. See how I can fling 
as many colours on the board as Spring. 
But Spring is brazen, flaunting cherry, peach,  
in shapes and colours far beyond my reach. 
It struts its yellow ranks, its greens and whites,  
brave little colours borne through bitter nights,  
parading now for Spring who woke and dressed 
in orpiments and limes and lemon greens 
the oak, the ash, the lime itself, the beech,  
late ragged beggars standing forth like queens. 
I cannot copy this. I own defeat 
and lay my brushes down before the feet 
of lovely Spring. 
Bring my guitar then. I have heard the Spring,  
calling with cooing doves the coming sun,  
singing for summer, clapping on the wing,  
impatient with the winter barely done,  
commanding choruses of dawn aloud 
with all the birds of heaven in a crowd. 
I'll tune my strings. I'll serenade the lark. 
I'll sound the songs I have in memory.  
Dawn with the blackbirds, eve with thrushes; dark 
for nightingales to come and sing with me. 
But every Spring surprises every ear 
with better songs than any heard last year 
and memory falls short. Spring, you must choose 
to praise yourself or find another muse.
Stealing Roses
A stolen cutting never fails to thrive. 
One snicks it off, a thumbnail is enough;  
you slip it in the pocket or the cuff 
and leave before the management arrive. 
I have some more outrageous tales to tell 
for I have known some thieves of love as well. 
This sort of robbery is more enchanting 
than any floral pilfering and planting. 
Flagrant skullduggery beneath the moon!  
With blackguard flairing and black underwearing 
the highwayman of passion, black dragoon,  
stands and delivers in his nakedness 
and steals your beauty underneath the noses 
of those who own it as I steal their roses.
Study The Classics.
Among the Greek sepulchral epigrams 
I suffered as a schoolboy I recall 
one Parmis, youthful fisherman of clams 
and any fish that can be hooked and hauled,  
flashing and twisting, from the purple sea. 
It was a tale reported in The Times,  
an echo of those sad and ancient rhymes,  
the other day that has reminded me. 
Parmis, Callignotus's son, had caught 
a little fish and while his right hand sought 
for balance put it in his mouth and Oh!  
It straightway wriggled down his throat and so 
he rolled in agony beside his lines,  
his narrow gullet blocked by fins and spines 
and slimy fish. His hooks, his rods, his boat 
availed him nothing, could not clear his throat 
and Parmis died. So did the fish I think. 
Three thousand years have passed as in a blink 
and by an English stream an angler stands 
who, having caught a fish, is short of hands 
and dies the self-same death. It goes to show 
that classics is a subject all should know.
Surgical Operation
My tumbrel bed has rolled along the ward 
towards the surgeon or the guillotine 
to sever or to save the spinal chord 
and hours and hours of dark have slipped between. 
Morning comes slowly to a troubled bed. 
The hunters of the night leave hidden lairs;  
the dark tormenters, strippers of the dead,  
their pale eyes watching, weigh you unawares. 
My cowardice lies bare with not a leaf 
to pluck and wear to hide me from the pain 
that searches my possession like a thief 
who robbed me once and comes to rob again. 
My gamin guardian angel saunters in 
with snotty nose, bare knees and impish grin.
Sutton Hoo
Wayland the Wanderer wrought in native gold 
great shoulder clasps and buckles for the Earl 
with filigrees and panels set with bold 
embellishments, with interlacing swirl 
of chequered garnet, lapis lazuli 
blue millefiori, amethyst and glass. 
It was a dazzlement of wizardry 
that nothing in the wide world could surpass 
and yet the Earl found no love for these things. 
He knew that iron is the stuff of kings. 
So Wayland sought the sky-flung bolts of Mars. 
He trawled a lodestone through the muddy streams 
and gleaned the dust of those fierce shooting stars 
shot from a battle line across our dreams. 
He forged the star dust, left it to anneal,  
reheated, quenched it, shattered it to bits,  
rewelded, folded, beat it into steel 
and formed it to the fatal shape that fits 
the swordsman's hand. He coated it with clay 
and quenched it, heated to the cherry tint,  
whetstoned and made it mirror every ray 
with horsetail, pumice and the dust of flint. 
He richly furnished it, that famous blade,  
of steel celestial that Wayland made. 
The Earl found many foes to take its measure 
and wordless was the tribute that they gave;  
the old man honoured it beyond all treasure 
and took it with him to an honoured grave. 
Now Earl and Wayland, all, are turned to dust 
except the gold, still bright and good as new. 
The sword that served him lies beside him, rust. 
The gold is anyone's; the steel stayed true.
Tangles
We are such tangles, such a skein of knots,  
our schemes and paths put in chaotic state 
by Fortune's spite, bad luck in drawing lots 
or by the double dealing hand of Fate. 
How can we find the ends of all these ropes 
and matted loops that should be separate?  
Good order is the object of my hopes,  
the jumbles coiled up and securely set. 
How can I find you amid so much choice 
of convoluted cords and trapping lines 
without direction or a guiding voice?  
At every move another snare entwines. 
Yet you, my love, who are myself on wings,  
tease every twist however close it clings.
Temptation On The River
Myself and Eve are dressed for summer,  
under willows by the river;  
softly on the satin pillows of the water gently slipping;  
idle blades in Isis dipping;  
traffic like a distant drummer… 
Look! Here comes a swimming snake!  
On the water, barely in it, serpent eyes of Eden glinting,  
green enamelled, surface dinting,  
there he lies for just a minute;  
on the shiny wetness resting,  
head on paddle, fork tongue testing;  
spirit of the poison chalice, innocent of any malice. 
Round his noble neck is rolled the ancient torque in leaf of gold,  
freshly fashioned by a master 
delicate as alabaster,  
emerald scales and, thin as whips, turquoise inlaid on his lips. 
Tempting lips?  
Not so, it errs to think that his could tempt like hers. 
Now he swims away in haste. 
Farewell, we've other fruit to taste.
The Art Of Poetry
‘Of writing well, be sure, the secret lies 
in wisdom, therefore study to be wise'[1] 
but what is wisdom how can it be got?  
It is not learning; cleverness it's not;  
nor ready wit nor probity nor wealth 
nor gained for sure by cunning nor by stealth;  
the words of children oftentimes have strength 
while many grown-up authors rave at length. 
So, writer, may your works be widely read 
but only if you've weighed what you have said. 
Does good verse come from nature or from art;  
so should I search the heavens or my heart?  
The human heart! Oh what a yearning there!  
What consolation, passion and despair!  
There is no art to search the heavens through 
to find an equal of the heart in you 
but we are nature and the poet sings 
the joy of being one of nature's things;  
it is most natural then that both should be,  
both art and nature, part of poetry. 
If you should ask the aim of writing rules:  
they guide the wise and are imposed on fools. 
When mighty music flows it has its ways 
of breaching barriers of bygone days 
but through the channels of those well worn schemes 
there comes the vision of the new regimes. 
It is a duty writers cannot shirk:  
to make the language sing, to make it work,  
to pass on learning and to cause delight;  
‘fail by a whisker and you fail outright'. 
[1] The Art of Poetry, Horace, translator John Conington
The Aspen Tree
I cannot like the aspen grove,  
the grey-green leaves, the trunks of mauve,  
the peacock branches held a span 
too high, to quiver like a fan,  
untidy leaves, absurdly round,  
their long thin stalks far off the ground 
and summer evenings are too rare 
when, in the sun's last crimson glare,  
the aspens, rising over brush,  
in isolation seem to blush 
from tops to roots, to tremble, gleam,  
and in the ebb of sunlight seem 
to glow with gold or purple light 
as lamp-lit amber glows at night. 
Or on a clear and windy day 
its leaves, intent to blow away,  
like noisy, flapping streamers try 
to rush into the distant sky 
like paper bunting tearing free;  
I cannot like the aspen tree.
The Chrysalis Sets Free The Butterfly
It's time to let the magic from your tongue;  
fire rockets to the stars across the night;  
time for unspoken verses to be sung;  
it's time for hidden things to catch the light. 
In heat unbearable clear gems arise;  
they crystallise in rock, in earth and slime;  
they struggle out and open flashing eyes  
which opened once will last as long as time. 
The chrysalis sets free the butterfly. 
Excalibur is loosed in Arthur's hand. 
The sword-sweep of the Seventh Samurai 
cuts down the final brigand of the band. 
The best honed steel prevails when swords are played 
and so it is when poetry is made.
The Church, Heydon, Norfolk
The bats that soil this church 
are cherished more than it is 
for the old religion 
has no value now nor power. 
Like all the worthless waste  
of long-abandoned cities,  
religion is a smidgen 
that did not last the hour. 
They snatched away their living  
from catechising pretties,  
the bat and feral pigeon 
in chancel and the tower.
The Dog Griswold, Bon Vivant, R.I.P.
He had a star that led him on 
towards these sausages he ate. 
He took his chance and he was gone   
to custody for liaison 
with this delightful steak he met. 
He had a star that led him on. 
The cooks all trembled and turned wan 
on sight of this pernicious pet. 
He took his chance and he was gone 
with cordon bleu filets mignon 
his most horrific misdeed yet. 
He had a star that led him on. 
It showed him where to fall  upon 
these trays of viandes en brouchette;  
he took his chance and he was gone. 
They had him collared before long 
with haute cuisine uneaten yet. 
He had a star that led him on;  
he took his chance and he was gone.
The End Of The Affair
Those late reflections in your eyes,  
those lilies of the moon, those green 
dye-wetted silks, those emeralds tell 
the truth too clear, too plainly and too well. 
Hang in the wind and spill your colours out 
you alien banners of unpleasant truth:  
there is no love to hold you close to me. 
Let oceans burn away and heaven's flame 
consume the earth: the thing remains the same
The Ghosts Of Glamis
I went to Glamis. I'd time to share 
with friends at arms commanding there. 
The towers are high; the bridge is wide;  
the trees nearby march side by side. 
They let me pass; the sword I wore,  
though made of glass, was honoured more 
in Highland tracts, in lands of flood  
and cataracts, than noble blood. 
Where roses grew a clansman stood;  
I never knew nor understood 
how he came there with step so light,  
from empty air to broad daylight. 
This gallowglass gave me a grin 
and then the pass that let me in. 
They say the ghost is not the one 
who stirs you most but common-run. 
Within its holy place I sat 
but found no face to wonder at 
so left for air till, frail but braw,  
an aged pair outside I saw. 
Some small requests the old man made 
such as on guests might have been laid.  
Upon the spot I took his list 
and like a Scot I held my tryst. 
I held my tryst like any Scot;  
soon met again they knew me not. 
What sprites were these with power no more 
to mind a face they lately saw?  
How could they dwell on earth at all 
with new acquaintance past recall?  
The last-post blew with notes that bled 
for these poor ghosts, alive or dead.
The Last Veteran
Of Great War warriors the last has died 
and it is said that where he rests his head 
all pomp and circumstance should be applied. 
With high-faluting, royal-saluting pride 
we should at the last accommodate the past. 
They all are gone. Old Simm and Powell and Jones 
who had the luck to live through fire and muck,  
shot, shell and hell and make at last old bones 
and talk about the war in undertones. 
We did not understand, we shielded folk,  
Powell, Jones and Simm recalling times so grim,  
so intimate the language that they spoke 
of legions vanished, swept away like smoke,  
how they were left to bear until the last 
a sad, survivor's guilt which never passed.
The Third Battle Of Ypres, Passchendaele
The Royal West Kents went in by night 
across the duckboard track. 
They were unconscious of their plight 
until the dawn attack. 
Shell craters touched and overlapped 
as far as eye could see;  
where many tanks and guns lay trapped,  
drowned in a slimy sea 
with rotting corpses, blackened bones 
of many thousand men 
who died so their respective thrones 
could rule the world again. 
The Royal West Kents pressed on ahead 
to lie in khaki heaps, new-dead. 
 (As remembered by Lance Corporal Vic Cole,1897-1995)
The Tree
When one great forest threw its cloak 
across the land from sea to sea 
the god who wields the thunder-stroke 
was worshipped in a grove of oak 
which held a sacred tree. 
The acolyte with bloody hands 
took up the sacrificial knife 
and carved this sign in runic bands     
‘You touch me not or lose your life'. 
Now twisted under sun and moon,  
too crooked for the saw and mill,  
stars shining through its boughs at noon,  
the sacred tree is living still 
and bearing yet the ancient rune. 
On lichened rock it still stands so,  
with  holly and with mistletoe,  
with berries red as blood and white,  
the tokens of the acolyte.
Thetford Forest
Common mullein, first fiery foot of rocketry,  
leaps to the sky in fits of yellow sparks,  
its fireworks failing in the fir-damp air. 
Slowly, like a wraith, the dog's breath slips 
through the rain-drenched trees. 
They're hung with ghosts, long, grey and thin:  
last year's dead needles, jealous of the green,  
the soft, new buds and summer's smell of pine,  
the cornflowers to come and the cuckoo pint,  
and all the summer things that come to pass.
Throwing Crockery
My daughter has just thrown a plate 
at her mate. 
So! The old custom survives 
among wives. 
Her maternal grandad, now late,  
hurled a plate 
at her gran 
and my dad, also dead,  
ducked his head 
for his life just as much 
from his wife 
as the hun (of '41) . 
In a stew 
I once threw, being studious 
and moody-ous:  
Acta Crystallographica,1987, part 2 
at my wife 
who is perfect but never gives up 
and annoyed with me once became 
so untame 
as to hit me with tea 
in a cup. 
When all's said:  
marriage is made in bed. 
It's unstable 
at table.
Undiscovered Things
Where lie the undiscovered things?  
Beneath the grass with buried kings 
too deep for common ploughs to till 
or lying shallow, who can tell?  
Put down your book; come help me seek 
the silent places where they're laid;  
a lucky or industrious spade 
could strike the stone that seals the well;  
a bird with music in its beak 
could sing the song that breaks the spell. 
If you are holy lend me grace 
to see the things you look upon,  
to leave them untouched in their place 
and having seen them to be gone.
Vale Of Swardeston
I walked along the vale of Swardeston 
in mid-July; a biplane crossed the sky,  
a rambling relic of another age 
as tardy as the bees that bumbled by. 
A single bell struck twelve; it sounded near,  
with happy, childish, voices, far yet clear. 
Along the river mingled mint and sage 
and boggy-scented mould perfumed the air. 
My questing dog swept through the meadowsweet 
but passed discreetly by the royal bowers 
of willow herb, a wonder among flowers,  
resplendent queen of pink, fantastic towers. 
Now winter comes to flood the rutted track 
and summer leaves are huddled in the bud;  
The wonder is that wonder can come back 
but willow herb is waiting in the mud.
War Song
Cast aside the fractious fife;  
pipes of war unkindly whistle;  
calling every dog to strife,  
throats to growling, fur to bristle. 
Quiet on your pipes of tin!  
Quiet now! For very little 
brings the grim Old Reaper in. 
He will dry your piping spittle. 
Those who love the piper's blast 
soon are done with martial ardour;  
should they save their necks at last 
bare and empty is their larder. 
Happy, prosperous and more 
they who never go to war.
What Is Art?
What is art? With what intention 
does its maker make invention?  
Is it old or is it recent,  
overmagnified, indecent,  
just a thing of passing fashion?  
Truth is art's eternal passion;  
nature is its primal source;  
love of life its driving force.
Winter
King Winter stripped the boughs of Spring's green leaf,  
uncluttered every twig and left it clean. 
Now naked skies are etched in sharp relief 
with secret writing hitherto unseen,  
a cipher coded in complexity 
that's written in a multitude of lines,  
in twisted tangles of perplexity,  
in skeins of old man's beard and snaking vines. 
The summer's blossom and the leafy dead 
lie tattered on the field where they were felled 
or thinly hang where untold numbers spread. 
In livery of white, by frost compelled;  
they wear the uniform of winter, king,  
who is the start and end of everything.
Winter Rondeau
Him  
      O let us go! For summer seems 
      already come and golden beams 
      warm leafless banks although they're bare;  
      wild honey seems to scent the air 
      and ghostly mayflies haunt the streams. 
 Her 
     I catch your words and eye which gleams 
     and tells me that it ill beseems 
     and yet the sunny banks are fair. 
     O let us go!  
 Him 
     We have surpassed the wanton themes 
     that jealous muses bring to dreams 
     with ravishments beyond compare. 
 Her 
     But now I am in disrepair 
     and O how cold the weather seems. 
     O let us go!
Wintry Thoughts In Spring
The moment winter goes away 
upon a long-awaited day 
when every petal, leaf and tree 
sings out ‘I'm living, look at me! ' 
in melancholy I'm immersed. 
The blossoms fall, the best go first;  
in recollection to remain 
like nothing but a fading stain. 
So starves the hermit in his cave 
because the world is but a grave 
and any beauty he can find 
is some illusion of the mind. 
Alas we tread our cloths of gold 
in moments which we cannot hold;  
we altogether cannot keep 
the paradise at which we peep. 
I think and therefore I should be 
cognizant of the things I see 
but truth I never could divine 
beyond this strange conceit of mine 
on every sentiment embossed:  
this precious moment must be lost 
and gone can never come again 
so every pleasure turns to pain.
Within A Faded Attic Of The Mind
Within a faded attic of the mind 
I stood and found it dusty with despair,  
with dry, dead leaves on flowers left behind,  
with bleaching furniture and half-drawn blinds… 
and then I thought saw you standing there 
within this faded attic of the mind. 
I saw you there but words I could not find;  
too many words had flown and left me bare,  
like dry, dead leaves on flowers left behind. 
You called my name and whispered something kind;  
your cherished voice sang in the arid air 
within a faded attic of the mind. 
Within this place I found myself confined 
to be a thing a wilted stem could bear,  
a dry, dead leaf on flowers left behind,  
a fruitless bud that never did unwind 
for vanished seasons left it hanging there,  
within a faded attic of the mind.
Wodwo
Such things are shy and hard to see but sometimes,  
like a nymph caught washing her hair,  
he forgets to look over his shoulder 
and fails to see you, frozen, standing there. 
In shaded summer beneath weighty boughs,  
he sees you standing and returns your stare,  
across his carpet of dog's mercury,  
or else star-scattered wood anemones 
or  yellow celendines or bright bluebells,  
or ramsons with their untamed garlic smells. 
The vision fades into the summer green,  
the autumn russet, winter's bony trees... 
You strain your eyes to fix what you have seen 
for eyes can trick with anything they please. 
There's only shadows and a twisted bough. 
It's nothing. Yet the wood feels empty now.
Words
To counterfeit reality with words 
what limp, insipid and unbellied things 
are languages. What twitterings of birds!  
What desiccated, snaky scribblings!  
Beyond the power of languages to tell 
the soaring eagle lives in heaven's eye;  
he needs no words to ride the wind so well 
or tell him how it feels to rule the sky.  
If it is real, the world in which we live,  
then we must feel its chill upon the cheek;  
the living presence that the cold winds give 
cannot be found in any words we speak. 
We have to feel the snow upon its wings 
to know the message that the cold wind brings.
You
What is made of all the scars 
and residues of blown-up stars 
set in a world of dust made new,  
condensed upon a spot of blue?  
You, you are!  
The moon has minted silver bars;  
its midnight rainbows end in jars 
and crocks of gold; this might be true 
but you are. 
The mountains know not the chamois;  
the sky is ignorant; the stars 
lit up for worlds they never knew;  
they grew no wiser as they grew 
but you are.
http://www.PoemHunter.com  4/5/2016 2:27:17 PM  
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
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