Today the prompt is to write a poem based on one of a given section of weird facts. Today is also the end of this year's challenge.
All swans are owned by the queen.
this is something i have always known, and being, from a young age
the sort of child who was passionate about animals and matters
green and ecological, i also always felt that if I were to accidentally
kill a swan i would need to report myself to the police for doing so,
but this view was ridiculed by all who heard me express it, and i was
made to feel stupid and inept and awkward because i had a sense
of principle about things, and of course as life as has progressed i have
learned the sad but true fact that people in general whilst normally being
relatively honest are also all too keen to 'get one over' on others or
to escape the consequences for their actions especially if those
actions were or are illegal or immoral, and this odd quirk of being
a normal human is a quirk that i do not share and because i do not
share it i have realised that i am not a normal human at all, but a
very abnormal one who does not work according to the standard issue
operating instructions, and that this weirdness in me is the reason for
so much about me and my life that for so long made no sense at all but
now is starting to and so it is not the fact of the ownership of swans
that is weird at all
A wee blog to contain the poetry written for each year's NaPoWriMo (http://www.napowrimo.net), a yearly month of poetry writing challenges that I first did in 2014. The blog title is deliberately written to mean two different things of course!!
Monday, 30 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-nine
Today the prompt is to write a poem that responds or engages with one of a selection of Sylvia Plath poems.
Among the Narcissi
by Silvia Plath
Spry, wry, and gray as these March sticks, Percy bows, in his blue peajacket, among the narcissi. He is recuperating from something on the lung. The narcissi, too, are bowing to some big thing : It rattles their stars on the green hill where Percy Nurses the hardship of his stitches, and walks and walks. There is a dignity to this; there is a formality- The flowers vivid as bandages, and the man mending. They bow and stand : they suffer such attacks! And the octogenarian loves the little flocks. He is quite blue; the terrible wind tries his breathing. The narcissi look up like children, quickly and whitely. |
The flocks of daffodils that dance and wave their yellowed heads
In mute and glowing admiration of the one walks between them
Are a static crowd, growing only beneath the grass-clad ground.
Their object of adoration is not so limited, and the sound
Of his voice is melodious and carries the words in flames
Of never-ending envy, his agile fingers with tune words weds.
And yet, those fingers plucking strings can scarcely contain
The silvered notes of glory, echoing the polished mirror round
And bursting into life as though lit by sunshine-fireworked beads.
And so those flocks, in music-time are wind-waving droopy heads
And swaying green-wand leaves in a tidal wave around them
Fixed in tribute, silent, soon to be returned to the earth-born ground.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-eight
Today the prompt is to write a poem in the style of a postcard.
I
wish
that
you
were
not
here.
And that you never had been.
Ever.
No sandcastle memories.
No dripping ice cream.
I
wish
that
you
were
not
here.
I
wish
that
you
were
not
here.
And that you never had been.
Ever.
No sandcastle memories.
No dripping ice cream.
I
wish
that
you
were
not
here.
Labels:
glopowrimo,
ice cream,
napowrimo,
pain,
postcard,
sadness,
sand,
sandcastle,
seaside,
short,
wish
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-seven
Today the prompt is to write a poem based on a tarot card of choice. I chose the 5 of cups.
Long cloak, black,
So eloquent
And terse.
Black, the cloak
That covers
The sins.
Cloak,
Long
And black.
The wine
Drunk
And gone.
The wine
Waiting.
Long and dark
Cloaking the wine
And desire
And death.
Long cloak, black,
So eloquent
And terse.
Black, the cloak
That covers
The sins.
Cloak,
Long
And black.
The wine
Drunk
And gone.
The wine
Waiting.
Long and dark
Cloaking the wine
And desire
And death.
Friday, 27 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-six
Today the prompt is to write a poem that embraces all five senses.
Stand still, my friend, and take this moment in your busy day
To contemplate on the which is happening in the shadows
And dark corners of our life.
Be silent, my friend, and take the time to listen to what they say,
Those who live in the darkest corners and the shadows
Of out affluent life.
Breathe deep, my friend, and not only the scent of the flowers gay
Will assail your nose, but also the stench of the shadows
Where poverty is daily life.
Your hand, my friend, could be held out to those who may
Not understand that you know not the cold of the shadows
That are their life.
Be brave, my friend, and realise that the sugar and fat are the way
That many feed themselves, for such is cheap, and in the shadows
Money is scarce to nurture life.
And when these things you have done, my friend, your prejudice lay
Aside, and learn that there is an inevitability in the shadows
Cast as they are by the shining sun of riches, privilege and wealth
That shine on your life; and then as Kipling might have saith
Take heed and mend the things you can
And stand up and be a human.
Stand still, my friend, and take this moment in your busy day
To contemplate on the which is happening in the shadows
And dark corners of our life.
Be silent, my friend, and take the time to listen to what they say,
Those who live in the darkest corners and the shadows
Of out affluent life.
Breathe deep, my friend, and not only the scent of the flowers gay
Will assail your nose, but also the stench of the shadows
Where poverty is daily life.
Your hand, my friend, could be held out to those who may
Not understand that you know not the cold of the shadows
That are their life.
Be brave, my friend, and realise that the sugar and fat are the way
That many feed themselves, for such is cheap, and in the shadows
Money is scarce to nurture life.
And when these things you have done, my friend, your prejudice lay
Aside, and learn that there is an inevitability in the shadows
Cast as they are by the shining sun of riches, privilege and wealth
That shine on your life; and then as Kipling might have saith
Take heed and mend the things you can
And stand up and be a human.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-five
Today the prompt is to write a poem that is a warning to myself.
Remember to check the ingredients!
Because when you don't, you suffer all sorts of unpleasant after-effects that seriously outweigh any pleasure you may have got from whatever you decided to eat.
Remember to look both ways!
Because if you don't you might meet a large bus and in the case of such a context you are basically bound to lose.
Remember to set your alarm!
Because if you forget you can guarantee that you will oversleep and it will happen on a day when you not oversleeping is a matter of extreme importance.
Remember to check that you have packed everything!
Because you can be sure that the thing you have forgotten will be the thing you need most of all and that you can least do without.
Remember to smile!
Because the world is used to shite and you can be certain that your shite is of no interest to anyone else but that your one smile might be the thing that makes the day okay for someone else.
Remember to check the ingredients!
Because when you don't, you suffer all sorts of unpleasant after-effects that seriously outweigh any pleasure you may have got from whatever you decided to eat.
Remember to look both ways!
Because if you don't you might meet a large bus and in the case of such a context you are basically bound to lose.
Remember to set your alarm!
Because if you forget you can guarantee that you will oversleep and it will happen on a day when you not oversleeping is a matter of extreme importance.
Remember to check that you have packed everything!
Because you can be sure that the thing you have forgotten will be the thing you need most of all and that you can least do without.
Remember to smile!
Because the world is used to shite and you can be certain that your shite is of no interest to anyone else but that your one smile might be the thing that makes the day okay for someone else.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-four
Today the prompt is to write an elegy that also contains and element of hope.
Jimmy Saville
For many years the media lauded your fundraising efforts,
And the public saw a genial and rather odd man,
Loveable perhaps, laughable for sure, but always
Positive and ready to help.
Friend of the sick and halt, helper of the lame,
And lover of little children.
When you died, the world wept, or some of it did,
Other parts did not weep, and felt relief,
Gladness, that loosening feeling at the end of the ordeal.
It seems strange to offer your death as a moment of hope,
But it is, it was, and it remains so, as it was
The catalyst that allowed the revelation of an age
Of abuse, it allowed the silent ones a voice that
For the first time was being listened to.
From your life, which amidst the evil and corruption
Also offered good, a bizarre silver lining of money
To expiate incompletely the sins of the donor,
From your life has grown a generation of people who
Are less afraid to shout out "Me Too", and a newly
Empowered voice granted to women who for too long
Have been told to be quiet and smile.
Jimmy Saville
For many years the media lauded your fundraising efforts,
And the public saw a genial and rather odd man,
Loveable perhaps, laughable for sure, but always
Positive and ready to help.
Friend of the sick and halt, helper of the lame,
And lover of little children.
When you died, the world wept, or some of it did,
Other parts did not weep, and felt relief,
Gladness, that loosening feeling at the end of the ordeal.
It seems strange to offer your death as a moment of hope,
But it is, it was, and it remains so, as it was
The catalyst that allowed the revelation of an age
Of abuse, it allowed the silent ones a voice that
For the first time was being listened to.
From your life, which amidst the evil and corruption
Also offered good, a bizarre silver lining of money
To expiate incompletely the sins of the donor,
From your life has grown a generation of people who
Are less afraid to shout out "Me Too", and a newly
Empowered voice granted to women who for too long
Have been told to be quiet and smile.
Labels:
abuse,
anger,
children,
corruption,
elegy,
glopowrimo,
hope,
Jimmy Saville,
men,
napowrimo,
sexual abuse,
women
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-three
Today the prompt is to write a poem based on heard material.
it is an inherent part of being human that we listen
and that when we listen we interpret
what we hear according to our own understanding
so when we hear the call of whales
or the song of the soaring curlew
we attribute to it meaning
but what if there is no meaning and if the sounds we hear
are nothing more than simply sounds
and the sounds themselves are mocking us
although surely the mockery would be wrong as that
would in turn attribute meaning
to the meaningless beauty of sounds
it is an inherent part of being human that we listen
and that when we listen we interpret
what we hear according to our own understanding
so when we hear the call of whales
or the song of the soaring curlew
we attribute to it meaning
but what if there is no meaning and if the sounds we hear
are nothing more than simply sounds
and the sounds themselves are mocking us
although surely the mockery would be wrong as that
would in turn attribute meaning
to the meaningless beauty of sounds
Labels:
beauty,
communication,
curlew,
glopowrimo,
human,
interpretation,
meaning,
napowrimo,
sounds,
whites
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-two
Today the prompt is to take an impossible statement and write a poem where it happens.
"I've cleared that bed of last year's plants . . . "
The autumn leaves lie dejected on the damp earth,
Stirring only torpidly when the wind taunts them.
Stark branches, naked on the tree that gave them birth
Defy the wind's commanding voice, that does condemn
And sentence them to death and lifeless end.
Skeletal flowers, in the summer blue and pink, that danced
Are brown now, dull, their petals paper thin.
And bracken dead and crushed, their broken stance
The wind attacks, and punishes for unnamed sin
That autumn wove and twisted into winter's friend.
But then the rains of spring cast down their softing touch
And seep, deep into the ground, below the frost
Until they reach long-slumbered roots, and much
As the gentle word does find the child that's lost,
The growth that time had ended, starts again.
"I've cleared that bed of last year's plants . . . "
The autumn leaves lie dejected on the damp earth,
Stirring only torpidly when the wind taunts them.
Stark branches, naked on the tree that gave them birth
Defy the wind's commanding voice, that does condemn
And sentence them to death and lifeless end.
Skeletal flowers, in the summer blue and pink, that danced
Are brown now, dull, their petals paper thin.
And bracken dead and crushed, their broken stance
The wind attacks, and punishes for unnamed sin
That autumn wove and twisted into winter's friend.
But then the rains of spring cast down their softing touch
And seep, deep into the ground, below the frost
Until they reach long-slumbered roots, and much
As the gentle word does find the child that's lost,
The growth that time had ended, starts again.
Sunday, 22 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty-one
Today the prompt is to write a poem based on the myth of Narcissus.
(I am treating this subject VERY laterally!)
There are many forms of beauty, as many as there
Are people who can see or hear or feel, and then
Some more beside.
But for me the epitome of beauty can be seen in
The hands of a skilled craftsman, in the grace and
Deft movements they employ.
And however the musician may consider himself
Above the ordinary mortal, his hands and the beauty
They create remain.
(I am treating this subject VERY laterally!)
There are many forms of beauty, as many as there
Are people who can see or hear or feel, and then
Some more beside.
But for me the epitome of beauty can be seen in
The hands of a skilled craftsman, in the grace and
Deft movements they employ.
And however the musician may consider himself
Above the ordinary mortal, his hands and the beauty
They create remain.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twenty
Today the prompt is write a poem that encapsulates rebellion.
With thanks to D.E.S.
A spring day, when the sun creeps over the rooftops
And illuminates the ground below, a promise of warmth
And a touch of gentle breeze, the oasis of pleasure
Before the summer that is yet to come.
A spring day, when the clamour of the office is
Almost unbearable, the clatter of typewriters clashing
With the constant chatter and gossip, and only the
Glimpse of foreign lands from the wharf to lighten
The stuff and stolid progress of the morning.
A spring day, and a sandwich to put in your pocket
When you escape at lunchtime, and a bench
In the garden in the square behind the office
Where peace and temporary tranquility reign.
A spring day, and the still pool of contemplation
Reflecting the plans for a new and growing year
In the garden on the roof that relieves the tedium
Of this soot-coated inner city life.
A spring day, and the shock of realising that
The man who has walked in through the garden gate
Is your boss, and the delightful amusement at his
Unconscious rebellion when he ignores the sign
And walks on the grass!!
With thanks to D.E.S.
A spring day, when the sun creeps over the rooftops
And illuminates the ground below, a promise of warmth
And a touch of gentle breeze, the oasis of pleasure
Before the summer that is yet to come.
A spring day, when the clamour of the office is
Almost unbearable, the clatter of typewriters clashing
With the constant chatter and gossip, and only the
Glimpse of foreign lands from the wharf to lighten
The stuff and stolid progress of the morning.
A spring day, and a sandwich to put in your pocket
When you escape at lunchtime, and a bench
In the garden in the square behind the office
Where peace and temporary tranquility reign.
A spring day, and the still pool of contemplation
Reflecting the plans for a new and growing year
In the garden on the roof that relieves the tedium
Of this soot-coated inner city life.
A spring day, and the shock of realising that
The man who has walked in through the garden gate
Is your boss, and the delightful amusement at his
Unconscious rebellion when he ignores the sign
And walks on the grass!!
Labels:
Bel Lamington,
boss,
city,
D E Stevenson,
DES,
garden,
glopowrimo,
London,
napowrimo,
office,
rebellion,
spring,
sunshine
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day nineteen
Today the prompt is to write a descriptive paragraph and then remove words to make it into a poem.
The track was stony, wet, with mud and puddles to negotiate as we walked along it. It did not climb or drop, but kept more or less level, apace with the Lussa running adjacent to its course. It wove in and out of the slender trees, here and there an older specimen stood watch over the peaceful scene. The air was clear, and soft to the touch, if you can so describe air, caressing the person breathing it in. In the distance there was the call of gulls, the sea can never be far away on an island like Mull, and closer to hand the birds darted through the leaves, showing themselves in glimpses to tantalise and perhaps to encourage us to walk on. After we had walked for perhaps 20 minutes or half an hour, the track made one last curve and we could see the cairn. It was roughly built, little more than a pile of stones, with a stone cross held firm at its centre. This, then, was the Pedlar's Pool, and this was the memorial to a man who died because he selflessly helped others.
When I walked away I knew the memory of his sacrifice would never leave me.
The track was stony, wet, with mud and puddles,
It did not climb or drop, but kept apace with the Lussa
running adjacent.
It wove in and out of the slender trees,
and here and there an older specimen stood watch.
The air was clear, soft to the touch, caressing.
In the distance, the call of gulls, the sea never far away,
and closer to hand the birds darted through the leaves,
showing themselves in glimpses to tantalise
and entice us round one last curve.
It was roughly built, the cairn,
little more than a pile of stones,
with a stone cross held firm at its centre,
the memorial to a man who died
because he selflessly helped others.
This, the Pedlar's Pool.
The memory of that place is within me still.
The track was stony, wet, with mud and puddles to negotiate as we walked along it. It did not climb or drop, but kept more or less level, apace with the Lussa running adjacent to its course. It wove in and out of the slender trees, here and there an older specimen stood watch over the peaceful scene. The air was clear, and soft to the touch, if you can so describe air, caressing the person breathing it in. In the distance there was the call of gulls, the sea can never be far away on an island like Mull, and closer to hand the birds darted through the leaves, showing themselves in glimpses to tantalise and perhaps to encourage us to walk on. After we had walked for perhaps 20 minutes or half an hour, the track made one last curve and we could see the cairn. It was roughly built, little more than a pile of stones, with a stone cross held firm at its centre. This, then, was the Pedlar's Pool, and this was the memorial to a man who died because he selflessly helped others.
When I walked away I knew the memory of his sacrifice would never leave me.
The track was stony, wet, with mud and puddles,
It did not climb or drop, but kept apace with the Lussa
running adjacent.
It wove in and out of the slender trees,
and here and there an older specimen stood watch.
The air was clear, soft to the touch, caressing.
In the distance, the call of gulls, the sea never far away,
and closer to hand the birds darted through the leaves,
showing themselves in glimpses to tantalise
and entice us round one last curve.
It was roughly built, the cairn,
little more than a pile of stones,
with a stone cross held firm at its centre,
the memorial to a man who died
because he selflessly helped others.
This, the Pedlar's Pool.
The memory of that place is within me still.
Labels:
cairn,
description,
glopowrimo,
Iain Thomson,
memorial,
memory,
Mull,
napowrimo,
Pedlar's Pool,
sacrifice,
track,
walk
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day eighteen
Today the prompt is to intersperse with another poem, line by line, backwards.
Springtide, or the day the rains came.
'ebbing drop by drop of grief?'
the tears like raindrops that weep over daffodils and tulips
'and how did I lose its succour'
when the long remembered sun refuses to shed the steel grey cloud,
'the springtide more golden to me than to the birds'
and the nighttime's silvered shroud.
'How did the springtide not last'
beyond that early promise when the crocus bloomed?
'about my feet with a silken rubbing'
grows the grass that fights the sodden ground
'and the unbreaking wave strikes'
a blow for winter's clinging grasp,
'with its reefs and the wrack of grief'
the last breath of the dying year, where
'The shore of trouble is hidden'
and the memories of happier days fade.
'with flood tide and a thousand sails'
the never-ending sea whispers its elusive song
'and the incomprehensible ocean fills'
with the tears of grief that flood the spring when
'my thought comes on you when you were young'
as always you will be, ever growing old and
'Again and again when I am broken'.
Springtide, or the day the rains came.
'ebbing drop by drop of grief?'
the tears like raindrops that weep over daffodils and tulips
'and how did I lose its succour'
when the long remembered sun refuses to shed the steel grey cloud,
'the springtide more golden to me than to the birds'
and the nighttime's silvered shroud.
'How did the springtide not last'
beyond that early promise when the crocus bloomed?
'about my feet with a silken rubbing'
grows the grass that fights the sodden ground
'and the unbreaking wave strikes'
a blow for winter's clinging grasp,
'with its reefs and the wrack of grief'
the last breath of the dying year, where
'The shore of trouble is hidden'
and the memories of happier days fade.
'with flood tide and a thousand sails'
the never-ending sea whispers its elusive song
'and the incomprehensible ocean fills'
with the tears of grief that flood the spring when
'my thought comes on you when you were young'
as always you will be, ever growing old and
'Again and again when I am broken'.
Labels:
Gaelic,
glopowrimo,
grief,
interspersed,
loss,
napowrimo,
sadness,
sorley maclean,
springtide,
tears
Friday, 20 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day seventeen
Today the prompt is to write a poem about a 'family anecdote'.
Small things.
It is not uncommon, I find, to have people
Tell tales of things that happened to them
Years ago, or that happened to their aunt or
Perhaps their cousin, or their father even.
These tales are the constant thread that
Weaves through the tapestry of family
Gathering, whether at a funeral when all
Are reminiscing, or at a wedding or party.
It is far from uncommon for such tales
To be told in company, over coffee with friends,
Or a beer with colleagues at the end
Of a very long day.
For the person who has no such happy
Memories on which to draw, they are a mixed
Blessing; they entertain and amuse, but
They also remind the listener of their
Own inadequacies that stem from their
Abnormality or Difference.
An orphan, a child in care, a child who
Was ill for years, whose parent was in
And out and in and out of hospital perhaps?
A child who does not understand, who was
Bullied or ignored or abused.
The stories are small things, but they not only
Provide a thread in the tapestry of life, they
Can also be the knife that rips the tapestry
From top to bottom and leaves it
In irredeemable tatters.
Small things.
It is not uncommon, I find, to have people
Tell tales of things that happened to them
Years ago, or that happened to their aunt or
Perhaps their cousin, or their father even.
These tales are the constant thread that
Weaves through the tapestry of family
Gathering, whether at a funeral when all
Are reminiscing, or at a wedding or party.
It is far from uncommon for such tales
To be told in company, over coffee with friends,
Or a beer with colleagues at the end
Of a very long day.
For the person who has no such happy
Memories on which to draw, they are a mixed
Blessing; they entertain and amuse, but
They also remind the listener of their
Own inadequacies that stem from their
Abnormality or Difference.
An orphan, a child in care, a child who
Was ill for years, whose parent was in
And out and in and out of hospital perhaps?
A child who does not understand, who was
Bullied or ignored or abused.
The stories are small things, but they not only
Provide a thread in the tapestry of life, they
Can also be the knife that rips the tapestry
From top to bottom and leaves it
In irredeemable tatters.
Labels:
abuse,
anecdotes,
bullying,
disability,
family,
glopowrimo,
happy,
memories,
napowrimo,
pain,
relations,
sad
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day sixteen
Today the prompt is a poem about 'play'.
The guitarist
A deep-voiced thundering, making the ground shake
And echoing in the very depths of your being.
And making you wonder.
A wall of impenetrable complexity, electric and wired
Encompassing you and spinning you round and round.
And making you nervous.
A soft waterfall, a streamlet flowing and bubbling
Down through ferns and trees, soothing you.
And making you breathe.
A solitary curlew, calling plaintively and ceaselessly
In the grey-blue-white heavens, and soaring.
And making you cry.
All of these and more,
The guitarist.
The guitarist
A deep-voiced thundering, making the ground shake
And echoing in the very depths of your being.
And making you wonder.
A wall of impenetrable complexity, electric and wired
Encompassing you and spinning you round and round.
And making you nervous.
A soft waterfall, a streamlet flowing and bubbling
Down through ferns and trees, soothing you.
And making you breathe.
A solitary curlew, calling plaintively and ceaselessly
In the grey-blue-white heavens, and soaring.
And making you cry.
All of these and more,
The guitarist.
Wednesday, 18 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day fifteen
Today the prompt is to write a poem where a villain meets misfortune and is proved human, or in this, case not human!
A misfortunate child.
When I was a small child I was told that there was a monster
That lived behind the dustbins.
I was warned never to approach this monster, as it was evil and would
Do unspeakable things to me.
One day I moved the dustbins to look for the monster, so I could ask
It in what way it was evil.
Behind the bins was a gap in the wall, and a door, a very small door,
And of course I pushed it open, and there was a sudden shuffling noise
And the monster ran away and hid on the other side of the door.
Puzzled I continued through the door, and found I was in my own back garden,
Just below the apple tree.
The only monster I could see was a toad that cowered by a loose brick,
Unable to escape past the curious child.
The only villain was a toad!
And then I turned on my dad and shouted at him, told him he should
Not tell me lies, and I was sent to bed for being impertinent.
A misfortunate child.
When I was a small child I was told that there was a monster
That lived behind the dustbins.
I was warned never to approach this monster, as it was evil and would
Do unspeakable things to me.
One day I moved the dustbins to look for the monster, so I could ask
It in what way it was evil.
Behind the bins was a gap in the wall, and a door, a very small door,
And of course I pushed it open, and there was a sudden shuffling noise
And the monster ran away and hid on the other side of the door.
Puzzled I continued through the door, and found I was in my own back garden,
Just below the apple tree.
The only monster I could see was a toad that cowered by a loose brick,
Unable to escape past the curious child.
The only villain was a toad!
And then I turned on my dad and shouted at him, told him he should
Not tell me lies, and I was sent to bed for being impertinent.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day fourteen
Today the prompt is to write a poem based on dream symbolism, using one or two given words - in this case seagull and hammer.
The Demon in the Teashop.
As the night rolled past the ticking hours
My mind was inspired to dream
And the dream was not of flowers
Or pretty plants and streams.
Instead along the wild seafront
I wandered, all alone,
When a tapping and ringing note
Was heard, source unknown.
I turned at once, to check this out
And what did I espy
But a seagull, without a doubt
Hammering, with mournful cry.
Dear seagull, what, I have to ask
Are you doing? Pray stop
And tell me the purpose of your task
Before I visit the adjacent teashop.
The seagull it glared, and opening its beak,
Thus dropping the hammer it held,
And answered me, in words clear to speak
That here was a tale it could tell.
Visit not, it said, the nearby cafe
And risk not their scones or cakes
For to enter would be to go astray
And to eat great risk to take.
I walked on past this ominous gull
And pushed open the teashop door,
Of tea and cake I would be full
Before walking on once more.
I sat me down, and ordered tea
And a scone to have as well,
And then a bloodstained banshee
Allowed her voice to swell.
Go forth you evil one, she said,
And leave this my dwelling place,
With tea you should only have but bread
And butter, you're a great disgrace.
So dear friend, if in your dreams,
A hammering seagull you encounter,
It may be best no to order tea
Unless with plain bread and butter!
The Demon in the Teashop.
As the night rolled past the ticking hours
My mind was inspired to dream
And the dream was not of flowers
Or pretty plants and streams.
Instead along the wild seafront
I wandered, all alone,
When a tapping and ringing note
Was heard, source unknown.
I turned at once, to check this out
And what did I espy
But a seagull, without a doubt
Hammering, with mournful cry.
Dear seagull, what, I have to ask
Are you doing? Pray stop
And tell me the purpose of your task
Before I visit the adjacent teashop.
The seagull it glared, and opening its beak,
Thus dropping the hammer it held,
And answered me, in words clear to speak
That here was a tale it could tell.
Visit not, it said, the nearby cafe
And risk not their scones or cakes
For to enter would be to go astray
And to eat great risk to take.
I walked on past this ominous gull
And pushed open the teashop door,
Of tea and cake I would be full
Before walking on once more.
I sat me down, and ordered tea
And a scone to have as well,
And then a bloodstained banshee
Allowed her voice to swell.
Go forth you evil one, she said,
And leave this my dwelling place,
With tea you should only have but bread
And butter, you're a great disgrace.
So dear friend, if in your dreams,
A hammering seagull you encounter,
It may be best no to order tea
Unless with plain bread and butter!
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day thirteen
Today the prompt is to use a familiar phrase or saying that is 'upended'.
"Red sky at night shepherd's delight, red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning"
(My thanks to Ralph McTell for inspiring this, which is nearly plagiarised from one of his songs, albeit the cause is different!)
Red Sky
The farmer, with his dog at his heels as ever, walked from the yard
Up into the field by the trees. He looked across at the empty acres,
That only yesterday were thronged with sheep, with cattle inbye.
He walked on past the trees, and up to the hill gate at the top of
The field, and thence out onto the moors that for three generations
Had been in his family, farmed before him by his father, his grandfather
And his great-grandfather. The heathered tops and rocky outcrops
Stood resolute and timeless in the cool of the evening, the blue of
The cloud-whispered sky showing no warmth, no delightful promise
Of a fine day tomorrow. Her turned, and gazed back down on the buildings,
The house where he had been born, the barns and the byres.
Heading back uphill he climbed higher, until he came to the stream that
Tumbled down, gathering strength as it approached the yard, and that
In olden days had powered the waterwheel that now was a mere
Skeleton of wooden limbs, bladeless and powerless, slowly rotting
Into obscurity. Pausing by the stream he stood still, silent, hands in
Pockets and face inscrutable in the now dimming last light of the day.
Beyond the farm buildings he could see the lower field, the trench within
It stark in the evening light, long shadows and grey craters juxtaposed with
The remaining grass that until only yesterday had been grazed by his cattle.
Even now, there was still smoke rising and spiralling from the funeral pyres,
The work of his lifetime and his father's and his grandfather's and his
Great-grandfather's, all smouldering in ruins, killed in a 'contiguous cull'.
With all the science and medicine and the things that vets could do, why
Could they not stop the foot and mouth by other means? Why did it need
To end the lives of so many, animals and men?
He pulled the letter from his pocket, the figures meaning nothing against
The memory of beasts he had tended from birth, and as he looked it one
Last time, he pressed the button on the detonation controller, and watched,
One more workless shepherd, as a red sky brought him no delight at all.
"Red sky at night shepherd's delight, red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning"
(My thanks to Ralph McTell for inspiring this, which is nearly plagiarised from one of his songs, albeit the cause is different!)
Red Sky
The farmer, with his dog at his heels as ever, walked from the yard
Up into the field by the trees. He looked across at the empty acres,
That only yesterday were thronged with sheep, with cattle inbye.
He walked on past the trees, and up to the hill gate at the top of
The field, and thence out onto the moors that for three generations
Had been in his family, farmed before him by his father, his grandfather
And his great-grandfather. The heathered tops and rocky outcrops
Stood resolute and timeless in the cool of the evening, the blue of
The cloud-whispered sky showing no warmth, no delightful promise
Of a fine day tomorrow. Her turned, and gazed back down on the buildings,
The house where he had been born, the barns and the byres.
Heading back uphill he climbed higher, until he came to the stream that
Tumbled down, gathering strength as it approached the yard, and that
In olden days had powered the waterwheel that now was a mere
Skeleton of wooden limbs, bladeless and powerless, slowly rotting
Into obscurity. Pausing by the stream he stood still, silent, hands in
Pockets and face inscrutable in the now dimming last light of the day.
Beyond the farm buildings he could see the lower field, the trench within
It stark in the evening light, long shadows and grey craters juxtaposed with
The remaining grass that until only yesterday had been grazed by his cattle.
Even now, there was still smoke rising and spiralling from the funeral pyres,
The work of his lifetime and his father's and his grandfather's and his
Great-grandfather's, all smouldering in ruins, killed in a 'contiguous cull'.
With all the science and medicine and the things that vets could do, why
Could they not stop the foot and mouth by other means? Why did it need
To end the lives of so many, animals and men?
He pulled the letter from his pocket, the figures meaning nothing against
The memory of beasts he had tended from birth, and as he looked it one
Last time, he pressed the button on the detonation controller, and watched,
One more workless shepherd, as a red sky brought him no delight at all.
Labels:
anger,
cattle,
contiguous cull,
despair,
farming,
fire,
foot and mouth,
glopowrimo,
napowrimo,
pyre,
sheep
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day twelve
Today the prompt is to write a haibun.
Redundant reservoir.
Many years ago I visited this valley with my grandfather, and it was a sea of construction,
fascinating to childish eyes, and the top of the valley was flooded already. There was a small
dam to hold back the early water from the moorland river, and the main valley was flattened
by bulldozers and diggers, farmhouses and cottages, barns and byres all demolished and left
as piles of debris and stone.
When I visited this valley with my grandfather there were some trees, they were young and
marched along the hillside in ranks, pine-treed soldiers fighting an imaginary war with the
native heather and bracken. Over time the trees grew and many have now been harvested,
not by men with horses as years ago, but by forwarders and chainsaws and heavy plant
running on petrol and diesel.
When I visit this valley now it is without my grandfather. When I visited with him he could
not have known that one day I would live just across the hill form this valley, and that I would
drive here several times a week and walk along the tracks and beside the lake. I have seen old trees
taken and sold, and new ones planted to take their place. I have seen new paths laid to replace
the old ones that meandered by the lake.
Today, when summer
Is hidden from view by pillow-soft
Clouds, I recall.
Redundant reservoir.
Many years ago I visited this valley with my grandfather, and it was a sea of construction,
fascinating to childish eyes, and the top of the valley was flooded already. There was a small
dam to hold back the early water from the moorland river, and the main valley was flattened
by bulldozers and diggers, farmhouses and cottages, barns and byres all demolished and left
as piles of debris and stone.
When I visited this valley with my grandfather there were some trees, they were young and
marched along the hillside in ranks, pine-treed soldiers fighting an imaginary war with the
native heather and bracken. Over time the trees grew and many have now been harvested,
not by men with horses as years ago, but by forwarders and chainsaws and heavy plant
running on petrol and diesel.
When I visit this valley now it is without my grandfather. When I visited with him he could
not have known that one day I would live just across the hill form this valley, and that I would
drive here several times a week and walk along the tracks and beside the lake. I have seen old trees
taken and sold, and new ones planted to take their place. I have seen new paths laid to replace
the old ones that meandered by the lake.
Today, when summer
Is hidden from view by pillow-soft
Clouds, I recall.
Labels:
bakethin,
clouds,
dams,
demolition,
farms,
fielder,
forestry,
glopowrimo,
grandfather,
harvesting,
lake,
memories,
napowrimo,
rain,
spring,
trees
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day eleven
Today the prompt is to write a poem that addresses the future subject.
Strange Dawn.
Across sand dusted with silver and gold
Your feet left no prints and the sea
Had no need to wash the strand clean.
Through evening velvet, blue and rich grey,
You drifted, singing, and laughing
At the echoes of another life.
In the deepest night, star-dimmed and
Moon-muted, your voice called faintly,
A call from beyond on a poor phone line.
When the morning dawned, there were colours
In bands and woven plaits across the sky.
But that was a future without you.
That future is black and the colour
Is false and mocks the grieving watchers.
Strange Dawn.
Across sand dusted with silver and gold
Your feet left no prints and the sea
Had no need to wash the strand clean.
Through evening velvet, blue and rich grey,
You drifted, singing, and laughing
At the echoes of another life.
In the deepest night, star-dimmed and
Moon-muted, your voice called faintly,
A call from beyond on a poor phone line.
When the morning dawned, there were colours
In bands and woven plaits across the sky.
But that was a future without you.
That future is black and the colour
Is false and mocks the grieving watchers.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day ten
Today the prompt is to write a poem where two or more things are happening simultaneously.
Unwilling presence.
The lights flickered in the tiniest of breezes, and
Illuminated the singer; the plans in my head were
Fighting to make sense, and surreptitiously I opened
A document on my mobile phone; the guitar sounded
Softly and the song was heralded by the delicate fingers
Forming and picking the chord and the melody, a musical
Signpost to point the way to the voice, the rolling accent
And warm tones describing; and I made notes about
The next weekend, and cursed the blue fairy lights.
Unwilling presence.
The lights flickered in the tiniest of breezes, and
Illuminated the singer; the plans in my head were
Fighting to make sense, and surreptitiously I opened
A document on my mobile phone; the guitar sounded
Softly and the song was heralded by the delicate fingers
Forming and picking the chord and the melody, a musical
Signpost to point the way to the voice, the rolling accent
And warm tones describing; and I made notes about
The next weekend, and cursed the blue fairy lights.
Labels:
distraction,
fairy lights,
gig,
glopowrimo,
guitar,
mobile phone,
music,
napowrimo,
singer
Thursday, 12 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day nine
The prompt today is to bring together something very big and something small.
One book.
There is a photograph of a wall that one can view on the internet.
It is a wall with an irregular and inappropriate 'lump' in it.
The wall has been built of bricks, strong and red, but with one small
And thin book laid on the ground as part of the foundations.
That one small thing has changed the whole of the wall.
When walking, in sturdy and substantial boots, the ingress of
A small stone is sufficient to render the walker into a state of
Great discomfort and pain; the stone, so tiny, can cause not only
Pain but blistering and can ultimately prevent the walker
From completing their journey.
The world is a dangerous place, there are many politicians
And bankers and businessmen who seek to control all that
Everyone does in order to maintain their inflated bank balances.
But all of these superior people can be challenged, and even one
Voice crying 'foul' could be enough to trigger the revolution . . .
One book.
There is a photograph of a wall that one can view on the internet.
It is a wall with an irregular and inappropriate 'lump' in it.
The wall has been built of bricks, strong and red, but with one small
And thin book laid on the ground as part of the foundations.
That one small thing has changed the whole of the wall.
When walking, in sturdy and substantial boots, the ingress of
A small stone is sufficient to render the walker into a state of
Great discomfort and pain; the stone, so tiny, can cause not only
Pain but blistering and can ultimately prevent the walker
From completing their journey.
The world is a dangerous place, there are many politicians
And bankers and businessmen who seek to control all that
Everyone does in order to maintain their inflated bank balances.
But all of these superior people can be challenged, and even one
Voice crying 'foul' could be enough to trigger the revolution . . .
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day eight
Today the prompt is a poem where something mystical occurs.
The Pedlar's Pool.
I walked out one day, to the Pedlar's Pool.
I only knew of it because I had heard the
Story in a song.
The day was a long one, and this was to be
The main part of it for me.
So I set off and walked to the Pedlar's Pool.
The Lussa runs beside the path,
A river that carries memories and
The present day in harmony as it makes
Its way down to the sea.
The air was silent, the sounds of the day
Faded into the background of the trees
And chattering river, and there subsided.
There is a cairn at the Pedlar's Pool.
It is rough, with an iron cross,
But is says as much as many a marble
Edifice, erected to some noble.
The cairn commemorates the selfless
Sacrifice of one man.
The Pedlar's Pool.
The Pedlar's Pool.
I walked out one day, to the Pedlar's Pool.
I only knew of it because I had heard the
Story in a song.
The day was a long one, and this was to be
The main part of it for me.
So I set off and walked to the Pedlar's Pool.
The Lussa runs beside the path,
A river that carries memories and
The present day in harmony as it makes
Its way down to the sea.
The air was silent, the sounds of the day
Faded into the background of the trees
And chattering river, and there subsided.
There is a cairn at the Pedlar's Pool.
It is rough, with an iron cross,
But is says as much as many a marble
Edifice, erected to some noble.
The cairn commemorates the selfless
Sacrifice of one man.
The Pedlar's Pool.
Labels:
cairn,
calm,
glopowrimo,
Iain Thomson,
Lussa,
memory,
Mull,
napowrimo,
pain,
path,
Pedlar's Pool,
plague,
track
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day seven
Today the prompt is list the various things, identities, that I am, and to choose one strong or powerful one, and one weak or vulnerable one, and allow them to converse.
To be seen . . .
There is strength in being woman, for the power of the womb and the
Gift that is granted through bearing the child are beyond compare
And no mere man can understand these things.
But then you are weak, you cannot lift, you cannot hit,
You cannot fight back, you are useless and need a man to
Do for you those things you lack the muscle to achieve.
But there is more determination in the tears that are shed in private,
And more life gained from the deepest feelings that love allows
A woman to feel for her child, than is ever known to man.
But you are weak, you cry with emotion, you cannot control
The tears when there is a death, you rush to comfort those in pain
When they need instead support and a firm hand.
A woman can take refuge in her humanity, she knows the truth that
Defines being human, and allows softness and beauty to smooth
The harshness of the cruelty of being man.
But you control me, your weakness swallows my power and hardness
And takes it into the warmth of the centre of you, and in doing so
You redefine the pain and suffering that is the essence of being human.
To be seen . . .
There is strength in being woman, for the power of the womb and the
Gift that is granted through bearing the child are beyond compare
And no mere man can understand these things.
But then you are weak, you cannot lift, you cannot hit,
You cannot fight back, you are useless and need a man to
Do for you those things you lack the muscle to achieve.
But there is more determination in the tears that are shed in private,
And more life gained from the deepest feelings that love allows
A woman to feel for her child, than is ever known to man.
But you are weak, you cry with emotion, you cannot control
The tears when there is a death, you rush to comfort those in pain
When they need instead support and a firm hand.
A woman can take refuge in her humanity, she knows the truth that
Defines being human, and allows softness and beauty to smooth
The harshness of the cruelty of being man.
But you control me, your weakness swallows my power and hardness
And takes it into the warmth of the centre of you, and in doing so
You redefine the pain and suffering that is the essence of being human.
Labels:
argument,
child,
childbearing,
cruelty,
determination,
female,
glopowrimo,
humanity,
male,
napowrimo,
power,
sex,
softness,
strength,
tears,
womb
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day six.
Today the prompt is to use line breaks in a way that stretches my comfort zone.
Triptych.
Three people stand there, all
in the same place but
actually all in different places
Entirely.
The brain is a country that is
Closed to all
But those who live in it, and
Even then it is mysterious, and
Maps get lost.
One woman, confused in
Her mind, with
One man who loves and
Tries to guide her, and
There is the photographer, a
Selfie-taker caught in
A mirror, and trapped
As an insect in amber.
The frame serves
To divide the
Three of them at
The same time as
It keeps them all
Together, despite
The tide of
Dementia.
Triptych.
Three people stand there, all
in the same place but
actually all in different places
Entirely.
The brain is a country that is
Closed to all
But those who live in it, and
Even then it is mysterious, and
Maps get lost.
One woman, confused in
Her mind, with
One man who loves and
Tries to guide her, and
There is the photographer, a
Selfie-taker caught in
A mirror, and trapped
As an insect in amber.
The frame serves
To divide the
Three of them at
The same time as
It keeps them all
Together, despite
The tide of
Dementia.
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day five.
Today the prompt is take a poem not in English and imagine the translation describes a photograph.
"Calbharaigh
Chan eil mo shùil air Calbharaigh
no air Betlehem an à igh
ach air cùil ghrod an Glaschu
far bheil an lobhadh fà is,
agus air seòmar an Dùn Èideann,
seòmar bochdainn 's crà idh,
far a bheil an naoidhean creuchdach
ri aonagraich gu bhà s."
(Somhairle MacGill-Eain)
The photo is of the cairn at Hallaig in Raasey.
(I know a little of Gaelic, mostly from studying the poetry of Sorley MacLean, but only a very little.)
Calvary.
There is a modern Calvary, where man
Is sacrificed, not just from Bethlehem, but all
Men are depleted.
They move from their native earth, from the
Isles and the shoreline, from the trees
And the heather and the warmth
Of evening fire, to the rain-washed
Bare and naked streets of the big city,
To Glasgow and beyond, to serve not the
Goddess of the land, but the needs of
Money and capitalism.
This, then, is a modern Calvary.
"Calbharaigh
Chan eil mo shùil air Calbharaigh
no air Betlehem an à igh
ach air cùil ghrod an Glaschu
far bheil an lobhadh fà is,
agus air seòmar an Dùn Èideann,
seòmar bochdainn 's crà idh,
far a bheil an naoidhean creuchdach
ri aonagraich gu bhà s."
(Somhairle MacGill-Eain)
The photo is of the cairn at Hallaig in Raasey.
(I know a little of Gaelic, mostly from studying the poetry of Sorley MacLean, but only a very little.)
Calvary.
There is a modern Calvary, where man
Is sacrificed, not just from Bethlehem, but all
Men are depleted.
They move from their native earth, from the
Isles and the shoreline, from the trees
And the heather and the warmth
Of evening fire, to the rain-washed
Bare and naked streets of the big city,
To Glasgow and beyond, to serve not the
Goddess of the land, but the needs of
Money and capitalism.
This, then, is a modern Calvary.
Labels:
calvary,
city,
depopulation,
earth,
Gaelic,
glopowrimo,
hallaig,
men,
napowrimo,
nature,
sorley maclean
Thursday, 5 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day four
Today the prompt is concrete terms to describe the abstract concept.
A Strange Dawn.
The sky is clear and the palest blue, a vibrant pastel of intensity,
Streaked with clouds and baby pink stripes as the dusk hour
Approaches and the day draws to a close.
This is the turning day, the ending day, the day of new beginnings
And saying goodbyes to the year that has made its
Presence so painfully felt, etched onto the soul
Like engraving on cut glass.
The night will fall like a velvet curtain to
Blanket the light from distant stars, and to deaden
The sounds of revelry from those who do not and
Cannot ever understand.
Tomorrow there will be a strange dawn, a new dawn,
A grey dawn, soft and unrelenting, pigeon-feathered
And dappled with silken threads.
Tomorrow is a step into the unknown future, a
Future that you are not part of, a year that you
Have never known, never breathed a single breath in,
Never shared a heartbeat with the rhythm of time.
My thanks to the McCalmans whose song 'Strange Dawn' was the inspiration for this poem about grief.
A Strange Dawn.
The sky is clear and the palest blue, a vibrant pastel of intensity,
Streaked with clouds and baby pink stripes as the dusk hour
Approaches and the day draws to a close.
This is the turning day, the ending day, the day of new beginnings
And saying goodbyes to the year that has made its
Presence so painfully felt, etched onto the soul
Like engraving on cut glass.
The night will fall like a velvet curtain to
Blanket the light from distant stars, and to deaden
The sounds of revelry from those who do not and
Cannot ever understand.
Tomorrow there will be a strange dawn, a new dawn,
A grey dawn, soft and unrelenting, pigeon-feathered
And dappled with silken threads.
Tomorrow is a step into the unknown future, a
Future that you are not part of, a year that you
Have never known, never breathed a single breath in,
Never shared a heartbeat with the rhythm of time.
My thanks to the McCalmans whose song 'Strange Dawn' was the inspiration for this poem about grief.
Labels:
changes,
dawn,
death,
dusk,
glopowrimo,
grief,
mccalmans,
napowrimo,
new year,
sadness,
strange dawn
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day three
Today the prompt is a poem that is a list of made-up names for something.
A Library of Ludicrosity.
A Guide to Watermelons, and The Cultivation of Dandelions,
Stand side by side with Mechanical Raisin Selection.
Move down a shelf, and there stands
A Woman's View of Wrenches and Egg-beaters (condensed).
Along the way is Sixteen Pencils, which leans on
The Dogs I Always Wanted to Walk.
For the bedside table there is Guitars I Have Known
And The Beachcombers Coffee Handbook.
And the ultimate in toilet reading is provided
By the unforgettable Paperclips from Scapa Flow.
A Library of Ludicrosity.
A Guide to Watermelons, and The Cultivation of Dandelions,
Stand side by side with Mechanical Raisin Selection.
Move down a shelf, and there stands
A Woman's View of Wrenches and Egg-beaters (condensed).
Along the way is Sixteen Pencils, which leans on
The Dogs I Always Wanted to Walk.
For the bedside table there is Guitars I Have Known
And The Beachcombers Coffee Handbook.
And the ultimate in toilet reading is provided
By the unforgettable Paperclips from Scapa Flow.
Labels:
books,
glopowrimo,
imagination,
list,
napowrimo,
reading
Monday, 2 April 2018
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day two
Today the prompt is to play with voice.
Caffeine.
If I, as a poet, write a poem about me,
A poem that includes I many times, and
That consequently makes the lines create
A statement of opinion or observation,
Then you, as the reader, are very likely
To assume that I am writing the poem as
Myself, and that I mean the things that
Are contained within the carefully crafted
And thought out lines of the stanza in question.
And what would you think if I pointed out
That the I in my poem is not the I in my life,
And that the I who speaks through the words
That I write is not me, but is me the poetic voice?
Would you understand that I can both hate
Instant coffee and at the same time I can
Need that cup of instant coffee to start my day?
Caffeine.
If I, as a poet, write a poem about me,
A poem that includes I many times, and
That consequently makes the lines create
A statement of opinion or observation,
Then you, as the reader, are very likely
To assume that I am writing the poem as
Myself, and that I mean the things that
Are contained within the carefully crafted
And thought out lines of the stanza in question.
And what would you think if I pointed out
That the I in my poem is not the I in my life,
And that the I who speaks through the words
That I write is not me, but is me the poetic voice?
Would you understand that I can both hate
Instant coffee and at the same time I can
Need that cup of instant coffee to start my day?
Labels:
coffee,
glopowrimo,
napowrimo,
person,
perspective,
voice,
words
GloPoWriMo 2018 - day one
Today the prompt is to write about a secret shame or pleasure.
Lock up.
For some the allure of stockings is the thing,
For some silk and leather, for others string.
For some the crack of whip is what they wish
And for others being beaten with wet fish!
There are those who gaze with greedy eyes
On the leggy blonde, and those who disguise
Their illicit love in books and illustrations;
And imagine the feel of a whore's ministrations.
But for you the leather, silk and lace has no appeal,
The sultry voice, the softest touch, the gentle scent
Raises no thought of lustful self indulgent pleasure;
Instead you dream of strength, your thoughts steal
Towards the gym bound women, in clothing meant
For ease of movement, for wrestling at leisure.
Lock up.
For some the allure of stockings is the thing,
For some silk and leather, for others string.
For some the crack of whip is what they wish
And for others being beaten with wet fish!
There are those who gaze with greedy eyes
On the leggy blonde, and those who disguise
Their illicit love in books and illustrations;
And imagine the feel of a whore's ministrations.
But for you the leather, silk and lace has no appeal,
The sultry voice, the softest touch, the gentle scent
Raises no thought of lustful self indulgent pleasure;
Instead you dream of strength, your thoughts steal
Towards the gym bound women, in clothing meant
For ease of movement, for wrestling at leisure.
Monday, 1 May 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day thirty
Today the prompt is basically repetition.
Nightmare.
Each night, most nights, but with no telling
When, a dream, a flash back to things that
Happened several years ago.
The sound of metal drinking on metal.
The endless ringing of the mobile phone
That was never answered.
The knock on the window and the sombre faces
At the door.
The soft words - I am afraid it is the worst news.
The long hours.
The kindness of a stranger.
The long hours.
The telephone calls the next day.
The long hours.
The careful planning about how things
Were to be managed, to make
Them feasible, one after another.
The well-meaning but destructive help of
Others who thought they knew best.
The long hours.
Realising, again and again and again that
This was real, and that it was not a bad
Dream, it was not a nightmare from which
I would awake.
The long hours.
It is as fresh today as it was then.
And the pain of added wounds has not faded.
The long hours.
There are things that cannot be put right.
Insults, hurt caused, angry words spoken.
The long hours.
Learning that in the end there is
No-one you can trust.
No-one.
The long hours.
The long hours.
(c) 2ndwitch
Nightmare.
Each night, most nights, but with no telling
When, a dream, a flash back to things that
Happened several years ago.
The sound of metal drinking on metal.
The endless ringing of the mobile phone
That was never answered.
The knock on the window and the sombre faces
At the door.
The soft words - I am afraid it is the worst news.
The long hours.
The kindness of a stranger.
The long hours.
The telephone calls the next day.
The long hours.
The careful planning about how things
Were to be managed, to make
Them feasible, one after another.
The well-meaning but destructive help of
Others who thought they knew best.
The long hours.
Realising, again and again and again that
This was real, and that it was not a bad
Dream, it was not a nightmare from which
I would awake.
The long hours.
It is as fresh today as it was then.
And the pain of added wounds has not faded.
The long hours.
There are things that cannot be put right.
Insults, hurt caused, angry words spoken.
The long hours.
Learning that in the end there is
No-one you can trust.
No-one.
The long hours.
The long hours.
(c) 2ndwitch
Saturday, 29 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-nine
Today the prompt is to take a word from a favourite poem. I have taken 'deer' from 'Hallaig' by Sorley MacLean.
Deer.
The long-night, stag-bellowing, antler crashing
Of the deer on the hill
Is now, as it ever was, the
Ever-lasting fight for prize,
One boy against another,
Vying for the brightest marble or the shiniest conker,
Wanting to be top-dog in the playground.
The running hinds, taunting and calling the calves
On the hillside, hiding in
Fresh green-bracken, waving leaved troops,
Standing sentinel whilst the wind
And rain march past in order,
Giving way only to the sun's passing glance
As it watches and warms the hinds and the calves.
And the bellowing-stag-antler-locked
Crashing continues, day after day after year after year.
Thus it ever was.
(c) 2ndwitch, 29/04/17
Deer.
The long-night, stag-bellowing, antler crashing
Of the deer on the hill
Is now, as it ever was, the
Ever-lasting fight for prize,
One boy against another,
Vying for the brightest marble or the shiniest conker,
Wanting to be top-dog in the playground.
The running hinds, taunting and calling the calves
On the hillside, hiding in
Fresh green-bracken, waving leaved troops,
Standing sentinel whilst the wind
And rain march past in order,
Giving way only to the sun's passing glance
As it watches and warms the hinds and the calves.
And the bellowing-stag-antler-locked
Crashing continues, day after day after year after year.
Thus it ever was.
(c) 2ndwitch, 29/04/17
Labels:
deer,
glopowrimo,
hallaig,
hills,
napowrimo,
nature,
seasons,
sorley maclean
Friday, 28 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-eight
Today the prompt is 'dipodic'.
Guitar
Touch the strings
The music rings
A melody sings
Of painful stings
That all grief brings
And joyful wings
Are gone.
(c) 2ndwitch, 28/04/17
Guitar
Touch the strings
The music rings
A melody sings
Of painful stings
That all grief brings
And joyful wings
Are gone.
(c) 2ndwitch, 28/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-seven
Today the prompt is taste.
Imitations.
The sugary crunchiness waves to you
From the bag on the
Supermarket shelf.
You walk past.
Then walk back.
Then on again, but no,
You give in and
Put one bag of those
Sugary crunchy doughnuts
In your trolley.
Back home you
Make a brew
And put one
On a plate.
Then you sit in
Your favourite chair
With a book to read.
You take one bite.
And then you
Remember.
THESE doughnuts are
Gloopy and laggy,
They lack crunch,
They have sweet and sickly
Gooey stuff
In the middle.
They are not
The sugary and crunchy
Doughnuts of your dreams.
To get the proper ones
You need to be at the
Seaside.
They need to come from
A booth on the front,
Fresh fried and
Piping hot, and
Dripping with
Sugar.
THOSE are the
Real Thing!
(c) 2ndwitch, 27/04/17
Imitations.
The sugary crunchiness waves to you
From the bag on the
Supermarket shelf.
You walk past.
Then walk back.
Then on again, but no,
You give in and
Put one bag of those
Sugary crunchy doughnuts
In your trolley.
Back home you
Make a brew
And put one
On a plate.
Then you sit in
Your favourite chair
With a book to read.
You take one bite.
And then you
Remember.
THESE doughnuts are
Gloopy and laggy,
They lack crunch,
They have sweet and sickly
Gooey stuff
In the middle.
They are not
The sugary and crunchy
Doughnuts of your dreams.
To get the proper ones
You need to be at the
Seaside.
They need to come from
A booth on the front,
Fresh fried and
Piping hot, and
Dripping with
Sugar.
THOSE are the
Real Thing!
(c) 2ndwitch, 27/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-six
Today the prompt is to be an archeologist of the future.
The Horses.
I remember my grandfather telling me that his
Grandfather had learned to work with the horses.
When they came back, exactly as Edwin Muir predicted.
And now, today, I do not understand what there was
To be learned about them, for they work
Alongside us each day, never tiring and always, always
Understanding the intricacies of the jobs we have to do.
One day, at school, we were told we should bring a trowel
And wear older clothes that were hard-wearing, for we were
Going to dig at the site of the old farm, to see what we could find
About those long ago days, to see if we could discover how they
Had managed, in the days before the horses came back.
We dug slowly at first, looking aways for a find, a thing,
A something that would puzzle but also enlighten.
Then we got bored and someone went home for a shovel.
And the digging was faster now, with those of us not digging
Sifting through the soil, a rough job, but we wanted to be
The first to turn up a new find, that special thing.
We came back the next day, and the next as well.
Someone brought a horse and plough, and we turned
The ground to make it quicker and easier to dig.
Then there was a shout, a cry of shock.
The shovel had hit something metallic.~
We crowded round the hole, and those in the depths
Shovelled dirt to those on the surface, and
It was barrowed away and piled up until there
Was a new hill at the back of the old farm paddock.
Once the metal was clear of soil, we hooked ropes
Round it and used the horse to pull it up.
And that is how we found the tractor.
Some say that having tractors now would be quicker
And more efficient than the horses.
But others say not, else why would tractors have
Fallen into disuse, and why did the horses come back?
(c) 2ndwitch, 26/04/17
The Horses.
I remember my grandfather telling me that his
Grandfather had learned to work with the horses.
When they came back, exactly as Edwin Muir predicted.
And now, today, I do not understand what there was
To be learned about them, for they work
Alongside us each day, never tiring and always, always
Understanding the intricacies of the jobs we have to do.
One day, at school, we were told we should bring a trowel
And wear older clothes that were hard-wearing, for we were
Going to dig at the site of the old farm, to see what we could find
About those long ago days, to see if we could discover how they
Had managed, in the days before the horses came back.
We dug slowly at first, looking aways for a find, a thing,
A something that would puzzle but also enlighten.
Then we got bored and someone went home for a shovel.
And the digging was faster now, with those of us not digging
Sifting through the soil, a rough job, but we wanted to be
The first to turn up a new find, that special thing.
We came back the next day, and the next as well.
Someone brought a horse and plough, and we turned
The ground to make it quicker and easier to dig.
Then there was a shout, a cry of shock.
The shovel had hit something metallic.~
We crowded round the hole, and those in the depths
Shovelled dirt to those on the surface, and
It was barrowed away and piled up until there
Was a new hill at the back of the old farm paddock.
Once the metal was clear of soil, we hooked ropes
Round it and used the horse to pull it up.
And that is how we found the tractor.
Some say that having tractors now would be quicker
And more efficient than the horses.
But others say not, else why would tractors have
Fallen into disuse, and why did the horses come back?
(c) 2ndwitch, 26/04/17
Labels:
apocalypse,
digging,
Edwin Muir,
glopowrimo,
horses,
napowrimo,
tractor
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty five
Today the prompt is to explore a small space.
Comparison
The floor has flagstones, just like his did.
I have a shelf on one side, just like his did.
I have room to put things on the other side,
Exactly like his did.
Mine is not so today as his was.
Mine does not smell like his did.
Mine is not so complete.
I have never used sulphur.
But in so many ways it is just
Like his was.
(c) 2ndwitch, 25/04/17
Comparison
The floor has flagstones, just like his did.
I have a shelf on one side, just like his did.
I have room to put things on the other side,
Exactly like his did.
Mine is not so today as his was.
Mine does not smell like his did.
Mine is not so complete.
I have never used sulphur.
But in so many ways it is just
Like his was.
(c) 2ndwitch, 25/04/17
Thursday, 27 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-four
Today the prompt is a poem of ekphrasis.
Margins.
In olden times the monks illustrated their
Handwritten manuscripts and also adorned them
With marginalia, pictures and visual jokes
To leaven the day of toil at a desk
In those days and in these days we still
See illustrated manuscripts of a sort whenever
We walk and notice the world around us.
We can walk in an industrial manuscript,
Decorated with brickwork, glass and concrete,
With graffiti to brighten the austerity, and
Natures little joke of dandelions and nettles.
Or we can walk in a rural manuscript
Decorated with the sunlight's glance on
The trees' new leaves, and where the waves
On the loch draw their own musical stave
To accompany the birdsong, and we
Can see the emerging bracken, curling
In imitation of life from outer space,
Teasing us with a promise of something
Spectacular and outlandish, and then
Bursting into fronds of well remembered green.
(c) 2ndwitch, 24/04/17
Margins.
In olden times the monks illustrated their
Handwritten manuscripts and also adorned them
With marginalia, pictures and visual jokes
To leaven the day of toil at a desk
In those days and in these days we still
See illustrated manuscripts of a sort whenever
We walk and notice the world around us.
We can walk in an industrial manuscript,
Decorated with brickwork, glass and concrete,
With graffiti to brighten the austerity, and
Natures little joke of dandelions and nettles.
Or we can walk in a rural manuscript
Decorated with the sunlight's glance on
The trees' new leaves, and where the waves
On the loch draw their own musical stave
To accompany the birdsong, and we
Can see the emerging bracken, curling
In imitation of life from outer space,
Teasing us with a promise of something
Spectacular and outlandish, and then
Bursting into fronds of well remembered green.
(c) 2ndwitch, 24/04/17
Labels:
glopowrimo,
graffiti,
industrial,
joke,
loch,
monks manuscripts,
napowrimo,
rural,
spring,
trees
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-three
Today the prompt is to write a double elevenie.
Twenty-two.
Happiness
Shed tears
Of laughter, smile
When gold shines through
Sunshine.
Sadness.
Shed tears
Of pain, smile
Through dark velvet blanket,
Midnight.
(c) 2ndwitch, 23/04/17
Twenty-two.
Happiness
Shed tears
Of laughter, smile
When gold shines through
Sunshine.
Sadness.
Shed tears
Of pain, smile
Through dark velvet blanket,
Midnight.
(c) 2ndwitch, 23/04/17
Labels:
eleven,
glopowrimo,
happy,
napowrimo,
sad,
tears,
twenty two
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-two
Today the prompt is to write a georgic. And no, I'm not going to tell you what one is!
In Orkney they . . .
The land is good, and most suitable
To cultivation, but wherever
I went it was terribly neglected
And underutilised.
The stock were not thriving
As they were let to roam
Freely and not fed.
The crops were sparse, and
Sown only for personal use.
But what else could you expect from
Such a lazy and slovenly race?
The words of Walter Scott do
not paint a happy picture of
the Orcadian isles that I know and
love, but then he was writing as
a rich man with all the benefit of
privilege and wealth.
And some of his ideas were
actually relatively sound.
(c) 2ndwitch, 22/04/17
In Orkney they . . .
The land is good, and most suitable
To cultivation, but wherever
I went it was terribly neglected
And underutilised.
The stock were not thriving
As they were let to roam
Freely and not fed.
The crops were sparse, and
Sown only for personal use.
But what else could you expect from
Such a lazy and slovenly race?
The words of Walter Scott do
not paint a happy picture of
the Orcadian isles that I know and
love, but then he was writing as
a rich man with all the benefit of
privilege and wealth.
And some of his ideas were
actually relatively sound.
(c) 2ndwitch, 22/04/17
Labels:
farming,
georgic,
glopowrimo,
land,
napowrimo,
Orkney,
Walter Scott
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty-one
Today the prompt is to write a poem based on or using overheard speech.
Off your trolley?
No, you can't.
Can you see if you can find four the same size?
I saw him the other day and he didn't say anything about it then.
Do they have any larger ones?
And then she told me to bend over.
Will you please stop dragging your feet?
Excuse me, can I get past you?
If it carries on I will have to go to the union.
Seven o'clock.
There's only one left.
You choose which one we get, darling.
Oh look, it's raining again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 21/04/17
Off your trolley?
No, you can't.
Can you see if you can find four the same size?
I saw him the other day and he didn't say anything about it then.
Do they have any larger ones?
And then she told me to bend over.
Will you please stop dragging your feet?
Excuse me, can I get past you?
If it carries on I will have to go to the union.
Seven o'clock.
There's only one left.
You choose which one we get, darling.
Oh look, it's raining again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 21/04/17
Monday, 24 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twenty
Today the prompt is to use the vocab of a sport or game of some sort.
Not Nemo . . .
My memory tells me that you are hidden here
Somewhere, the coordinates have not been
Changed, and I am doing my best to follow
The arrow until I get to the hidden treasure.
Or actually, I am possibly looking for a box,
Because however much I want to be FTF
Or part of a team that finds it, I know that
You are now forever a DNF that I cannot
Return and avenge.
(c) 2ndwitch, 20/04/17
Not Nemo . . .
My memory tells me that you are hidden here
Somewhere, the coordinates have not been
Changed, and I am doing my best to follow
The arrow until I get to the hidden treasure.
Or actually, I am possibly looking for a box,
Because however much I want to be FTF
Or part of a team that finds it, I know that
You are now forever a DNF that I cannot
Return and avenge.
(c) 2ndwitch, 20/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day nineteen
Today the challenge is to write about a creation myth.
In the books.
In the story books, and the ones that are given out in the
classroom at school during the lesson called biology or
possibly, if you are at a progressive sort of school that seems
to abound nowadays, in a lesson about health and stuff,
then mummy meets daddy, they get on very well and
eventually go and see a vicar or something, buy
expensive clothes, have a fancy day that costs a fortune and
where women dress up like exotic butterflies, men like
butlers from a West End farce, and three uncles and an aged
aunt drink too much and do the cancan, and the
lovely couple head off to somewhere like barbados or bognor
and finally discover what the stuff between their legs is for,
and come back with the mummy preggers and all is well.
It is a myth.
It does not account for the sex after too much vodka, or
the battle to win the attention of gorgeous gav from
slutty sal, or to get prim priscilla drunk enough to
persuade her into your bed and keep sober enough to
escape in the morning before she wakes up and
remembers who you are!
It does not account for sex on the back seat of a fiat 500,
or behind the market stall.
It does not account for that lad who promised the earth then
turned out to be married and who now denies
Any Responsibility.
Myth is not Real Life.
(c) 2ndwitch, 19/04/17
In the books.
In the story books, and the ones that are given out in the
classroom at school during the lesson called biology or
possibly, if you are at a progressive sort of school that seems
to abound nowadays, in a lesson about health and stuff,
then mummy meets daddy, they get on very well and
eventually go and see a vicar or something, buy
expensive clothes, have a fancy day that costs a fortune and
where women dress up like exotic butterflies, men like
butlers from a West End farce, and three uncles and an aged
aunt drink too much and do the cancan, and the
lovely couple head off to somewhere like barbados or bognor
and finally discover what the stuff between their legs is for,
and come back with the mummy preggers and all is well.
It is a myth.
It does not account for the sex after too much vodka, or
the battle to win the attention of gorgeous gav from
slutty sal, or to get prim priscilla drunk enough to
persuade her into your bed and keep sober enough to
escape in the morning before she wakes up and
remembers who you are!
It does not account for sex on the back seat of a fiat 500,
or behind the market stall.
It does not account for that lad who promised the earth then
turned out to be married and who now denies
Any Responsibility.
Myth is not Real Life.
(c) 2ndwitch, 19/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day eighteen
Today the prompt is to use neologisms.
As important as blood.
Each day is compete in itself
A challenge to be met
And overcome.
In the process it is
Necessary
To indulge in something
That possibly outranks
Blood in the service of
Life.
Team - when with milk.
Steam - when with milk and sugar.
(Although adding sugar
Is guaranteed to
Result in my out and
Our opprobrium!)
Cheam - if with spices.
Chea - if the chinese sort.
And
Givememymugofteanow
First thing in the morning.
Of course.
(c) 2ndwitch, 18/04/17
As important as blood.
Each day is compete in itself
A challenge to be met
And overcome.
In the process it is
Necessary
To indulge in something
That possibly outranks
Blood in the service of
Life.
Team - when with milk.
Steam - when with milk and sugar.
(Although adding sugar
Is guaranteed to
Result in my out and
Our opprobrium!)
Cheam - if with spices.
Chea - if the chinese sort.
And
Givememymugofteanow
First thing in the morning.
Of course.
(c) 2ndwitch, 18/04/17
Monday, 17 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day seventeen
Today the prompt is write a poetic nocturne.
Nocturne.
Stand still, now, just there,
Don't move, but listen.
Hold your breathe and
Hear the song that the trees
Are whispering in the night air.
Pause, now, where you are,
Walk no further on that path
Yet, until you have waited for
The tiny countermelodies of
Nighttime animals and birds,
Of bats and errant breezes,
And until you have heard them
And let them sing in your
Heart, with the trees.
At night, the lake is full of the
Tears you have shed, and the
Soft caress of the breathing wind
Plays like gossamer fingers over
The surface of your memories.
At night, the ache that held your
Daytime soul in thrall is freed
To waltz slowly with your thoughts,
And the words you left unsaid
Will flee away, cloud-borne and
Echoing in the vastness of the sky.
Stand still, at night, stand still
And listen.
(c) 2ndwitch, 17/04/17
Nocturne.
Stand still, now, just there,
Don't move, but listen.
Hold your breathe and
Hear the song that the trees
Are whispering in the night air.
Pause, now, where you are,
Walk no further on that path
Yet, until you have waited for
The tiny countermelodies of
Nighttime animals and birds,
Of bats and errant breezes,
And until you have heard them
And let them sing in your
Heart, with the trees.
At night, the lake is full of the
Tears you have shed, and the
Soft caress of the breathing wind
Plays like gossamer fingers over
The surface of your memories.
At night, the ache that held your
Daytime soul in thrall is freed
To waltz slowly with your thoughts,
And the words you left unsaid
Will flee away, cloud-borne and
Echoing in the vastness of the sky.
Stand still, at night, stand still
And listen.
(c) 2ndwitch, 17/04/17
Sunday, 16 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day sixteen
Today the prompt is a letter.
Dear Mother.
I am in receipt of your last, my thanks for
Your words of advice.
However, I fear I need to remind you that
It is now too late to regret the birth
Of several children, and that your repeated
Suggestions regarding abortions and the like
Would be construed as murder when the
Children in question are alive and in this world.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I am again in receipt of your letter, for which
I thank you for taking the time to write.
I am well aware that you consider the man I
Married to be a waste of space, however regardless
Of your views, I am married to him, and as he is the
Father of the children you have previously
Recommended I abort, then I think you will have to
Come to terms with the marriage as well as their existence.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I am in receipt of your recent, again I thank you
For expending your energy and ink in writing.
I do realise that if you had arranged to have an abortion
When you became pregnant with me there would
Not be this exchange of letters, and nor would
You be in a position to chastise me for my choices
And actions since I was born.
I acknowledge and accept that I am a disappointment to you,
But I fear that I am now too far down the path I am on
To return and change anything.
I would find it difficult and not appealing to become
A son that you might have preferred.
I gather from your comments that using my brain to study
And pursue education is not a commendable activity.
This is a pity, as study is one of the few things I am
Competent at.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I finally got the telephone call last night, dear Mother,
Although the initial calls were ignored as someone
Was at the time harassing me over the return of some
Music, and was refusing to accept that it would be sent as
Soon as we could organise the posting. I think he wanted
Me to get in the car and drive 30 miles to deliver it there and then.
Anyway, it meant I missed the call from the hospital that
Told of your demise.
So in death, as in all of my life, I failed you.
And I will simply have to live with that knowledge.
Yours sincerely,
The fat, ugly, useless, failure of a daughter that you created.
(c) 2ndwith, 16/04/17
Dear Mother.
I am in receipt of your last, my thanks for
Your words of advice.
However, I fear I need to remind you that
It is now too late to regret the birth
Of several children, and that your repeated
Suggestions regarding abortions and the like
Would be construed as murder when the
Children in question are alive and in this world.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I am again in receipt of your letter, for which
I thank you for taking the time to write.
I am well aware that you consider the man I
Married to be a waste of space, however regardless
Of your views, I am married to him, and as he is the
Father of the children you have previously
Recommended I abort, then I think you will have to
Come to terms with the marriage as well as their existence.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I am in receipt of your recent, again I thank you
For expending your energy and ink in writing.
I do realise that if you had arranged to have an abortion
When you became pregnant with me there would
Not be this exchange of letters, and nor would
You be in a position to chastise me for my choices
And actions since I was born.
I acknowledge and accept that I am a disappointment to you,
But I fear that I am now too far down the path I am on
To return and change anything.
I would find it difficult and not appealing to become
A son that you might have preferred.
I gather from your comments that using my brain to study
And pursue education is not a commendable activity.
This is a pity, as study is one of the few things I am
Competent at.
Yours sincerely, Daughter.
I finally got the telephone call last night, dear Mother,
Although the initial calls were ignored as someone
Was at the time harassing me over the return of some
Music, and was refusing to accept that it would be sent as
Soon as we could organise the posting. I think he wanted
Me to get in the car and drive 30 miles to deliver it there and then.
Anyway, it meant I missed the call from the hospital that
Told of your demise.
So in death, as in all of my life, I failed you.
And I will simply have to live with that knowledge.
Yours sincerely,
The fat, ugly, useless, failure of a daughter that you created.
(c) 2ndwith, 16/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day fifteen.
Today the prompt is about being halfway, or in the middle.
Halfway.
Wherever you are
You are halfway
To somewhere.
Wherever you were
You were halfway
To here or there.
Where you will be
You will be halfway
To the next place.
Halfway is not
The beginning
Or the end.
Halfway is
A movable feast
Between then and then.
The past is gone
It was halfway
Between the distant
Past
And the recent
Past.
The future is
Halfway to the
Distant future.
So, whatever you think,
Wherever you imagine
Yourself to be,
You are always
Only
Halfway
There.
(c) 2ndwitch, 15/04/17
Halfway.
Wherever you are
You are halfway
To somewhere.
Wherever you were
You were halfway
To here or there.
Where you will be
You will be halfway
To the next place.
Halfway is not
The beginning
Or the end.
Halfway is
A movable feast
Between then and then.
The past is gone
It was halfway
Between the distant
Past
And the recent
Past.
The future is
Halfway to the
Distant future.
So, whatever you think,
Wherever you imagine
Yourself to be,
You are always
Only
Halfway
There.
(c) 2ndwitch, 15/04/17
Friday, 14 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day fourteen
Today the challenge is to write a clerihew.
Running away from Waverley!
The young Walter Scott
When on holiday from court
Went to sea in the Pharos with a party of men
To view many lighthouses then back home again!
(And in doing so avoided the furore over the whether or not he wrote the Waverley novels!)
(c) 2ndwitch, 14/04/17
Running away from Waverley!
The young Walter Scott
When on holiday from court
Went to sea in the Pharos with a party of men
To view many lighthouses then back home again!
(And in doing so avoided the furore over the whether or not he wrote the Waverley novels!)
(c) 2ndwitch, 14/04/17
Thursday, 13 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day thirteen
Today the prompt is to write a ghazal. In my case I shall write something that is a bit like one, if I'm lucky.
The Guitarist.
The slender body of the musical man is rapt and focussed on strings;
His mind entertains no existence other than this, the tautness of strings.
The fingers caress the metalled tension, they stroke and strike, picking the tune
The rhythm of the chords walking the melody on the path of the strings.
The head is bent, hair falls across his eyes, hides the echoing pain of life
A light, silver then gold, that flashes in time with the melody of strings.
The intimacy shimmers, one man makes love to the guitar, to music
And caresses from their tightened length the thrill of the climax of the strings.
There are no words, no phrases, that can supplant this symbiosis of man
And instrument, no witchery can replace the ecstasy of the strings.
(c) 2ndwitch, 13/04/17
Over the years I have come to love the music of the guitar more and more. There is an exquisite sense of perfection in the mastery of human over strings, and this intrigues and beguiles me. There are some guitarists who are one with the instrument, there are some for whom the instrument is their lover, and as I once unfortunately described the sublime Martin Simpson . . . there are those who do both!!!
This poem is about the relationship between a man and his instrument - however good his voice, however good a singer, for me the guitar playing comes first. It could be Martin Simpson, it could easily be Michael Chapman, it could be John Doyle, it could be Steve Tilston, but this poem is actually about watching and listening to Ivan Drever.
The Guitarist.
The slender body of the musical man is rapt and focussed on strings;
His mind entertains no existence other than this, the tautness of strings.
The fingers caress the metalled tension, they stroke and strike, picking the tune
The rhythm of the chords walking the melody on the path of the strings.
The head is bent, hair falls across his eyes, hides the echoing pain of life
A light, silver then gold, that flashes in time with the melody of strings.
The intimacy shimmers, one man makes love to the guitar, to music
And caresses from their tightened length the thrill of the climax of the strings.
There are no words, no phrases, that can supplant this symbiosis of man
And instrument, no witchery can replace the ecstasy of the strings.
(c) 2ndwitch, 13/04/17
Over the years I have come to love the music of the guitar more and more. There is an exquisite sense of perfection in the mastery of human over strings, and this intrigues and beguiles me. There are some guitarists who are one with the instrument, there are some for whom the instrument is their lover, and as I once unfortunately described the sublime Martin Simpson . . . there are those who do both!!!
This poem is about the relationship between a man and his instrument - however good his voice, however good a singer, for me the guitar playing comes first. It could be Martin Simpson, it could easily be Michael Chapman, it could be John Doyle, it could be Steve Tilston, but this poem is actually about watching and listening to Ivan Drever.
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day twelve
Today the prompt is to use alliteration and assonance.
The cold of warm embrace.
Deep and dark, the moonlit hours dance
Mournfully towards the morning, the
Morning's soft and soulless light scatters
Shadows across the grey and ghostly landscape
Of the day, the darkling day.
The thin and threadbare tapestry
Tells tales of what was, and now what
Will never be; the tapestry rent, riven
Right from hem to hem, and cast aside
Discarded, never again to hang
Upon the castle wall.
Airborne, forlorn, the dreams and hope
Hang now in tatters, the flag at half-mast
And music muted into disharmonious murmer.
Perhaps, perchance, one day, some day, there
Will be a way to bring back to life the broken
Promises, but in the meantime, the dreamtime
Nightmare is sharp and cutting, the window-fingers
That keep on tapping never end.
(c) 2ndwitch, 12/04/17
The cold of warm embrace.
Deep and dark, the moonlit hours dance
Mournfully towards the morning, the
Morning's soft and soulless light scatters
Shadows across the grey and ghostly landscape
Of the day, the darkling day.
The thin and threadbare tapestry
Tells tales of what was, and now what
Will never be; the tapestry rent, riven
Right from hem to hem, and cast aside
Discarded, never again to hang
Upon the castle wall.
Airborne, forlorn, the dreams and hope
Hang now in tatters, the flag at half-mast
And music muted into disharmonious murmer.
Perhaps, perchance, one day, some day, there
Will be a way to bring back to life the broken
Promises, but in the meantime, the dreamtime
Nightmare is sharp and cutting, the window-fingers
That keep on tapping never end.
(c) 2ndwitch, 12/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day eleven
Today the prompt is to write a 'bop'. No, I'd never heard of it either, but apparently it is a thing.
Remember the . . .
I am but a storm-tossed leaf, floating back and forth
On the angry burn of someone else's life.
I am the shuttlecock, hit with force from left to right
And back from right to left again.
I can see my goal, but am kept so far away, and
Having no money makes it all the harder.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
I try to call the players out, to listen to my tale, to
Not forget that plans, once made, should not be
Forgotten; but I am not of note in this, and the pain
That other humans use to play a vicious game
Blinds them to the pain that is caused for me, and
Then I am dragged in to a dispute that is not mine
And each thinks that I will side with the other
When I only side now with myself.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
I know now that I cannot walk this path without
Hard words, and I know that hard words could
Have the effect of moving me further from my simple
Goal, but yet, do I not have the right to be heard, and
To be known and be a constant not part of the fight.
Things are not easy, and there is no answer.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
(c) 2ndwitch, 11/04/17
Remember the . . .
I am but a storm-tossed leaf, floating back and forth
On the angry burn of someone else's life.
I am the shuttlecock, hit with force from left to right
And back from right to left again.
I can see my goal, but am kept so far away, and
Having no money makes it all the harder.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
I try to call the players out, to listen to my tale, to
Not forget that plans, once made, should not be
Forgotten; but I am not of note in this, and the pain
That other humans use to play a vicious game
Blinds them to the pain that is caused for me, and
Then I am dragged in to a dispute that is not mine
And each thinks that I will side with the other
When I only side now with myself.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
I know now that I cannot walk this path without
Hard words, and I know that hard words could
Have the effect of moving me further from my simple
Goal, but yet, do I not have the right to be heard, and
To be known and be a constant not part of the fight.
Things are not easy, and there is no answer.
And the words that danced the reel are dancing still.
(c) 2ndwitch, 11/04/17
Labels:
anger,
arguments,
dancing,
dispute,
fights,
glopowrimo,
granddaughter,
hurt,
napowrimo,
pain,
reel,
words
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day ten
Today the prompt is to write a portrait of someone important to me.
To my granddaughter.
I cannot but be sad to see the way that you know are so like I was then,
But there is no changing the disposition of genetics, no adjusting of the
Genetic code to make things be different. And you have the curl in
Your hair, the twist that sometimes turns against the rest.
You have the eyes that gaze with wonder and a knowledge beyond
The understanding of those of us who watch you as you wander
Through this broken and damaged world.
In your laughter lies the key to reparation, the key to
Mending that which is so broken, and in your smile
Lies balm and peace to end all wars.
As time moves on you will grow and learn, and perhaps, just perhaps
You will lose some of the wisdom that you have now but cannot
Give words to express; or perhaps you will keep it, adding,
Day after day to its sum, and gaining only that which can
Build and heal, and make once again a world where all
Can live together in friendship, where fishes swim the rivers
And the seas, and where plants and man live with animals
In one great complementary global union of valuing difference.
In your hands is the future, guard it well.
(c) 2ndwitch, 10/04/17
To my granddaughter.
I cannot but be sad to see the way that you know are so like I was then,
But there is no changing the disposition of genetics, no adjusting of the
Genetic code to make things be different. And you have the curl in
Your hair, the twist that sometimes turns against the rest.
You have the eyes that gaze with wonder and a knowledge beyond
The understanding of those of us who watch you as you wander
Through this broken and damaged world.
In your laughter lies the key to reparation, the key to
Mending that which is so broken, and in your smile
Lies balm and peace to end all wars.
As time moves on you will grow and learn, and perhaps, just perhaps
You will lose some of the wisdom that you have now but cannot
Give words to express; or perhaps you will keep it, adding,
Day after day to its sum, and gaining only that which can
Build and heal, and make once again a world where all
Can live together in friendship, where fishes swim the rivers
And the seas, and where plants and man live with animals
In one great complementary global union of valuing difference.
In your hands is the future, guard it well.
(c) 2ndwitch, 10/04/17
Labels:
child,
future,
glopowrimo,
granddaughter,
hope,
laughter,
napowrimo,
wisdom
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day nine
Today the prompt is a nice line poem. Some examples are given, but I am going my own way!
Nine seasons.
Bare twig, bare branch, bare tree,
Dead leaf, fallen, and fading
Thin wind, lazy wind, cold wind.
Soft caress of snow, a winter fee
To pay for promises spring making,
And slowly, 'neath white shroud begins
The spring's warm promise, buzzing bee
And summer sun, green leaf parading
Marching tall the trees beckon autumn in.
(c) 2ndwitch, 09/04/17
Nine seasons.
Bare twig, bare branch, bare tree,
Dead leaf, fallen, and fading
Thin wind, lazy wind, cold wind.
Soft caress of snow, a winter fee
To pay for promises spring making,
And slowly, 'neath white shroud begins
The spring's warm promise, buzzing bee
And summer sun, green leaf parading
Marching tall the trees beckon autumn in.
(c) 2ndwitch, 09/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day eight
Today the prompt is to use repetition.
My England.
The limestone edges, sculpted by water
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
The caves and chasms that lie beneath
The heather and bracken of the moorland
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
The white clouds, chasing each other across
The vast northern skies, sun-kissed and rain-washed
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
This land.
Our land.
Limestone land.
Granite land.
Heather land.
Forest land.
Sea strand land.
Wheat field land.
High crag land.
Not land of blood.
Not land of flags.
Not land of names.
Not land of religion.
Not land of skin shade.
Not land of empire.
Not land of slaves.
This England.
(c) 2ndwitch, 08/04/17
My thanks to the writing of Hamish Henderson and of Maggie Holland for my inspiration. My 'thanks' to Brexit for coalescing my thoughts.
My England.
The limestone edges, sculpted by water
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
The caves and chasms that lie beneath
The heather and bracken of the moorland
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
The white clouds, chasing each other across
The vast northern skies, sun-kissed and rain-washed
Are timeless, changing and never-changing.
This land.
Our land.
Limestone land.
Granite land.
Heather land.
Forest land.
Sea strand land.
Wheat field land.
High crag land.
Not land of blood.
Not land of flags.
Not land of names.
Not land of religion.
Not land of skin shade.
Not land of empire.
Not land of slaves.
This England.
(c) 2ndwitch, 08/04/17
My thanks to the writing of Hamish Henderson and of Maggie Holland for my inspiration. My 'thanks' to Brexit for coalescing my thoughts.
Friday, 7 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day seven
Today the challenge is to write a 'fortuitous' poem. I cannot say it fascinates me, but . . .
Only in my dreams.
When the wind touches your hair with the lightest of touches;
When your tea is just that bit too hot for you to drink;
When you go to bed after a good day, and feel the caress of the sheets;
Like these, one day, a thought passes into your mind, and you
Watch the dogs racing down the disused road, fighting
Over a stick, rolling and tumbling as only dogs can;
And you glance down when you get back into the driving seat
Of your so-practical estate car, and see the pen that you thought
Had vanished in the pocket of the rather seedy salesman who
Had spent ten minutes trying to convince you to buy double glazing.
And you put the pen, safely, into your pocket,
And drive home to your already double-glazed house.
But even that does not erase the memory that drifted into
Your conscious mind, and it does not erase the echo
Of laughter that you will never ever hear again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 07/04/17
Only in my dreams.
When the wind touches your hair with the lightest of touches;
When your tea is just that bit too hot for you to drink;
When you go to bed after a good day, and feel the caress of the sheets;
Like these, one day, a thought passes into your mind, and you
Watch the dogs racing down the disused road, fighting
Over a stick, rolling and tumbling as only dogs can;
And you glance down when you get back into the driving seat
Of your so-practical estate car, and see the pen that you thought
Had vanished in the pocket of the rather seedy salesman who
Had spent ten minutes trying to convince you to buy double glazing.
And you put the pen, safely, into your pocket,
And drive home to your already double-glazed house.
But even that does not erase the memory that drifted into
Your conscious mind, and it does not erase the echo
Of laughter that you will never ever hear again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 07/04/17
Thursday, 6 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day six
Today the challenge is to write a poem that looks at something from different perspectives.
Turning Point.
One day
Is sufficient
Now.
There is waiting
Soft air
No noise.
A bustle
Of nurses
Attend.
Unexpected
The knock
On the door.
The long
And slow
Decline.
I
Have said
My goodbyes.
(c) 2ndwitch, 06/04/17
Turning Point.
One day
Is sufficient
Now.
There is waiting
Soft air
No noise.
A bustle
Of nurses
Attend.
Unexpected
The knock
On the door.
The long
And slow
Decline.
I
Have said
My goodbyes.
(c) 2ndwitch, 06/04/17
Labels:
day,
death,
glopowrimo,
memories,
napowrimo,
passing,
perspective,
short,
time,
view
Wednesday, 5 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day five
The challenge today is to write a poem based in the natural world.
Fractured and formed.
The rocks, laid down in an ice age so many years ago, are bare to the atmosphere
And the rivening force of the rain and snows, the wind driving particles upwards
Into the atmosphere, and seeding the storming clouds with miniature rocks
And airborne gravel; those rocks, forming the river bed and banks,
And guiding the torrents from mountain to sea, ox-bowed lakes
And random pools, swirling and spinning in the whirlpool of life.
Your life was part of those rocks, part of the limestone pavements
And the granite cliffs, part of the river bed and the grey-cast screes,
Your breath was interwoven in the soaring trees and waving bracken,
And your laugh carried on the last breath of the evening breeze.
(c) 2ndwitch, 05/04/17
Fractured and formed.
The rocks, laid down in an ice age so many years ago, are bare to the atmosphere
And the rivening force of the rain and snows, the wind driving particles upwards
Into the atmosphere, and seeding the storming clouds with miniature rocks
And airborne gravel; those rocks, forming the river bed and banks,
And guiding the torrents from mountain to sea, ox-bowed lakes
And random pools, swirling and spinning in the whirlpool of life.
Your life was part of those rocks, part of the limestone pavements
And the granite cliffs, part of the river bed and the grey-cast screes,
Your breath was interwoven in the soaring trees and waving bracken,
And your laugh carried on the last breath of the evening breeze.
(c) 2ndwitch, 05/04/17
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day four
Today the prompt is to post an enigmatic variation, where something is alluded to but not actually described.
Long nights.
The soft feathered shroud of evening falls,
As it is always said to do, although perhaps
It would be better to suggest that it 'settles'
Or 'alights', as falling has a heaviness to it
That belies the reality of dusk, of
Daylight gate, however when it is a shroud
The perhaps it does fall, it does land
Heavily and solidly on the land?
Long hours, long dreams, a reminiscence
That cannot be denied, a dream that spins
And circles without pity, falling, falling,
Yes, indeed falling, a chasm of darkness
And repair, with a soundtrack of horror
And gothic nightmare interwoven in
The fabric of existence.
I do not care if the gloves are white
Or non-existent, they will tap on my
Window again and again, and the
News will repeat without mercy.
(c) 2ndwitch, 04/04/2017
Long nights.
The soft feathered shroud of evening falls,
As it is always said to do, although perhaps
It would be better to suggest that it 'settles'
Or 'alights', as falling has a heaviness to it
That belies the reality of dusk, of
Daylight gate, however when it is a shroud
The perhaps it does fall, it does land
Heavily and solidly on the land?
Long hours, long dreams, a reminiscence
That cannot be denied, a dream that spins
And circles without pity, falling, falling,
Yes, indeed falling, a chasm of darkness
And repair, with a soundtrack of horror
And gothic nightmare interwoven in
The fabric of existence.
I do not care if the gloves are white
Or non-existent, they will tap on my
Window again and again, and the
News will repeat without mercy.
(c) 2ndwitch, 04/04/2017
Labels:
death,
dreams,
glopowrimo,
grief,
horror,
Ivan Drever,
loss,
napowrimo,
nightmares
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day three
Today the challenge is to write an elegy.
This post is back posted due to being elsewhere and busy.
Given my intention to use this month to more closely examine some painful stuffs, this prompt is both easy and hard. I am sure my reader who knows me will expect one specific subject here, but I am not doing that - I might in some way by the end, but not yet.
Let's do it.
The power of the internal combustion engine always held you in thrall
And on a fine day, any trip, any trip at all
Would be met with a smile
And 'Let's do it'.
So we did all sorts, you and I, from the Lakes to the Dales
And down the Midlands and Wales;
And as the bike ate the miles
You said 'Let's do it.'
We stopped for a bun and a mug of strong driver's tea
Or sometimes we stopped for the scenery.
Wherever we were, whatever beguiled,
You'd say 'Let's do it'.
But it was not so easy, we did not always concur
And plans and ideas caused rancour.
We argued and bickered and riled
As you said 'Let's do it'.
You gave up on the bike, bought a fancy new car
And thought we could us it to travel afar,
But I had exams, and all the while
You'd say 'Let's do it'.
In time we decided, as we grew and matured, to try life apart
And our last words were in anger, to sting and to smart.
And no longer a couple for a period of trial
You said 'Let's do it'.
One week on from that last heated affray
You set out to visit me on Valentine's Day
You never arrived, two of you died
And so we've never done it again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 03/04/2017
(The two who died were the subject of the elegy and the driver of the bus that was in the collision. I will always grieve more for that innocent family man who died because of carelessness than I actually do for my ex.)
This post is back posted due to being elsewhere and busy.
Given my intention to use this month to more closely examine some painful stuffs, this prompt is both easy and hard. I am sure my reader who knows me will expect one specific subject here, but I am not doing that - I might in some way by the end, but not yet.
Let's do it.
The power of the internal combustion engine always held you in thrall
And on a fine day, any trip, any trip at all
Would be met with a smile
And 'Let's do it'.
So we did all sorts, you and I, from the Lakes to the Dales
And down the Midlands and Wales;
And as the bike ate the miles
You said 'Let's do it.'
We stopped for a bun and a mug of strong driver's tea
Or sometimes we stopped for the scenery.
Wherever we were, whatever beguiled,
You'd say 'Let's do it'.
But it was not so easy, we did not always concur
And plans and ideas caused rancour.
We argued and bickered and riled
As you said 'Let's do it'.
You gave up on the bike, bought a fancy new car
And thought we could us it to travel afar,
But I had exams, and all the while
You'd say 'Let's do it'.
In time we decided, as we grew and matured, to try life apart
And our last words were in anger, to sting and to smart.
And no longer a couple for a period of trial
You said 'Let's do it'.
One week on from that last heated affray
You set out to visit me on Valentine's Day
You never arrived, two of you died
And so we've never done it again.
(c) 2ndwitch, 03/04/2017
(The two who died were the subject of the elegy and the driver of the bus that was in the collision. I will always grieve more for that innocent family man who died because of carelessness than I actually do for my ex.)
Sunday, 2 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day two
Today the prompt is to write a recipe as a poem.
Foolproof recipe for a broken person.
The ingredients for a broken person are varied,
And various, changing depending on the season
And year of initial conception.
In general it is best to have two parents, one
Of either gender, as this is the simplest
Method of creating the initial mixture,
But of course there are alternative approaches
That also result in a small human person.
Once the person is created, then the processing begins:
A balanced and unbroken person will have been
Raised gently, and will know they are loved
So if your intention is to guarantee that the
Person is demonstrably broken, then rough
And thoughtless handling is the first stage.
Make sure that they are not hugged too often
And that they are punished for crying or
Being unsure.
If the growing small person becomes inquisitive
As they discover a wider world, shout at them
Often, and smack them when the chance arises.
Once the small person is large enough to venture
Into the company of others they are
Ready for the initial proving:
Send the child to places that frighten them, and
Do not forget to explain to those in charge that
This child is 'trouble' and must be watched carefully.
Ensure that the place chosen incorporates a wide
Range of activities that the child is unhappy about,
And be sure that they are compulsory.
A year or so in this environment will
Be sufficient to have the child ready to be knocked back:
Take the child from the place you first chose and
Send them to school.
Be sure they are already different, perhaps 'hothouse'
Them into early reading, or focus on musical skills,
Anything like that to make them stand out from
The crowd, and to allow their peers and teachers
To ridicule them for showing off.
If that is not possible, you can encourage the
Peers and teachers to see them as thick and stupid
And thus also make ridicule appropriate.
This knocking back will then allow the rising:
Take the child from the school that they have
Slowly and painfully learned to negotiate and
Send them to another, larger school, with many
More children and rules and uniform and many
More potential pitfalls and problems.
At this stage there is a danger that some teachers
Will see the child as not broken, and as worthy of
Positive attention, so in compensation, if this happens,
The parents need to be extremely careful to maintain
The attitude of criticism and disapproval in the home.
During this rising, finding the subjects in which the
Child might excel allows further damage to be
Inflicted by not allowing them to study these things.
Once these years of schooling are ended, the risen
Child is now ready for baking:
Force the child to go to college or other establishment
That will allow them to learn skills for a career.
Be careful to reinforce that they are not as good as
Any other child there, and remind them at all times
That they are an inferior person who is not worthy of
Help or support, and who is unlikely to ever meet
Someone who loves them, as they are unlovable - their
Life to this point has surely taught them that - or
To be employed as any employer will immediately
See through the act and recognise the failure that
They really and truly are.
For best effect, the baking should be interrupted
Midway, and the person removed from the 'oven'
And subjected to some form of major life change
Like pregnancy or serious illness.
The person is now ready for attempted consumption:
Take a sharp knife of ridicule, a testing of means
Or worth, and slice into the person, thus
Bringing to public view the uncooked and
Mangled interior, the raw dough, grey with
Manipulation, and the rotten, fetid smell.
Cast the person to one side as useless, and
Good only to be beaten, or raped or ignored.
Then, in due course, when the broken person is
Destitute and on the streets, a fat politician can come
Along and condemn them for their lack of application
And poor life choices, and make sure they are blamed
For all the ills of society.
(c) 2ndwith, 02/04/17
Foolproof recipe for a broken person.
The ingredients for a broken person are varied,
And various, changing depending on the season
And year of initial conception.
In general it is best to have two parents, one
Of either gender, as this is the simplest
Method of creating the initial mixture,
But of course there are alternative approaches
That also result in a small human person.
Once the person is created, then the processing begins:
A balanced and unbroken person will have been
Raised gently, and will know they are loved
So if your intention is to guarantee that the
Person is demonstrably broken, then rough
And thoughtless handling is the first stage.
Make sure that they are not hugged too often
And that they are punished for crying or
Being unsure.
If the growing small person becomes inquisitive
As they discover a wider world, shout at them
Often, and smack them when the chance arises.
Once the small person is large enough to venture
Into the company of others they are
Ready for the initial proving:
Send the child to places that frighten them, and
Do not forget to explain to those in charge that
This child is 'trouble' and must be watched carefully.
Ensure that the place chosen incorporates a wide
Range of activities that the child is unhappy about,
And be sure that they are compulsory.
A year or so in this environment will
Be sufficient to have the child ready to be knocked back:
Take the child from the place you first chose and
Send them to school.
Be sure they are already different, perhaps 'hothouse'
Them into early reading, or focus on musical skills,
Anything like that to make them stand out from
The crowd, and to allow their peers and teachers
To ridicule them for showing off.
If that is not possible, you can encourage the
Peers and teachers to see them as thick and stupid
And thus also make ridicule appropriate.
This knocking back will then allow the rising:
Take the child from the school that they have
Slowly and painfully learned to negotiate and
Send them to another, larger school, with many
More children and rules and uniform and many
More potential pitfalls and problems.
At this stage there is a danger that some teachers
Will see the child as not broken, and as worthy of
Positive attention, so in compensation, if this happens,
The parents need to be extremely careful to maintain
The attitude of criticism and disapproval in the home.
During this rising, finding the subjects in which the
Child might excel allows further damage to be
Inflicted by not allowing them to study these things.
Once these years of schooling are ended, the risen
Child is now ready for baking:
Force the child to go to college or other establishment
That will allow them to learn skills for a career.
Be careful to reinforce that they are not as good as
Any other child there, and remind them at all times
That they are an inferior person who is not worthy of
Help or support, and who is unlikely to ever meet
Someone who loves them, as they are unlovable - their
Life to this point has surely taught them that - or
To be employed as any employer will immediately
See through the act and recognise the failure that
They really and truly are.
For best effect, the baking should be interrupted
Midway, and the person removed from the 'oven'
And subjected to some form of major life change
Like pregnancy or serious illness.
The person is now ready for attempted consumption:
Take a sharp knife of ridicule, a testing of means
Or worth, and slice into the person, thus
Bringing to public view the uncooked and
Mangled interior, the raw dough, grey with
Manipulation, and the rotten, fetid smell.
Cast the person to one side as useless, and
Good only to be beaten, or raped or ignored.
Then, in due course, when the broken person is
Destitute and on the streets, a fat politician can come
Along and condemn them for their lack of application
And poor life choices, and make sure they are blamed
For all the ills of society.
(c) 2ndwith, 02/04/17
Saturday, 1 April 2017
GloPoWriMo 2017 - day one.
The prompt is to adopt the style of Kay Ryan, and write in a tight, rhymed and pointed fashion.
The bed
Is really not
The answer.
Play dead
And tie knots,
A dancer
On the stage
Of life, and stars
Reproach
With hissing rage.
A Grecian vase
Is both
Of beauty
And of grace.
Your eyes
Transmute it
Into space
And silence cries
A single note
Of pain
That lasts forever.
(c) 2ndwitch, 01/04/17
The bed
Is really not
The answer.
Play dead
And tie knots,
A dancer
On the stage
Of life, and stars
Reproach
With hissing rage.
A Grecian vase
Is both
Of beauty
And of grace.
Your eyes
Transmute it
Into space
And silence cries
A single note
Of pain
That lasts forever.
(c) 2ndwitch, 01/04/17
Labels:
art,
glopowrimo,
hiding,
napowrimo,
pain,
retreat,
running away
Transition.
I have been reading the NaPoWriMo blog and have noticed that it has a choice of names. I have never really thought about where it was based, but of course it is American.
I am not American.
So I note that the alternative name is 'GloPoWriMo' - Global Poetry Writing Month. Mmm, this makes some sense.
But only some, as why can it not be national to where I live in Scotland just as much as it is to America?
Good question, old woman, good question.
So I am undecided, but this year I shall participate in GLOPoWriMo . . . but I shall leave the past years as NaPoWriMo, and I shall consider at the end where next.
And so to my preliminary.
This year I am determined to bring into the open some of the darker side of my mind, to write about things that have long remained hidden.
You see, I should have done this yesterday but did not for a range of reasons, so today I have to 'do' two posts. The first is this, and it now has to include a haibun.
The form appeals to me.
And the title works up there and for the haibun.
Transition.
The day had been normal and life had continued apace. As ever, she was late leaving, but only to join friends for the evening before going to work. It wasn't raining.
Tyres on empty road
Dusk darkened to owl hours
Killer on wrong side.
(c) 2ndwitch, 01/04/17
I am not American.
So I note that the alternative name is 'GloPoWriMo' - Global Poetry Writing Month. Mmm, this makes some sense.
But only some, as why can it not be national to where I live in Scotland just as much as it is to America?
Good question, old woman, good question.
So I am undecided, but this year I shall participate in GLOPoWriMo . . . but I shall leave the past years as NaPoWriMo, and I shall consider at the end where next.
And so to my preliminary.
This year I am determined to bring into the open some of the darker side of my mind, to write about things that have long remained hidden.
You see, I should have done this yesterday but did not for a range of reasons, so today I have to 'do' two posts. The first is this, and it now has to include a haibun.
The form appeals to me.
And the title works up there and for the haibun.
Transition.
The day had been normal and life had continued apace. As ever, she was late leaving, but only to join friends for the evening before going to work. It wasn't raining.
Tyres on empty road
Dusk darkened to owl hours
Killer on wrong side.
(c) 2ndwitch, 01/04/17
Labels:
crash,
dark,
death,
glopowrimo,
haibun,
napowrimo,
owl,
summer,
transition
Monday, 6 March 2017
NaPoWriMo 2016 30
Today's prompt is a poem in translation, and today is also The End for this year's NaPoWriMo. I do not translate from the only other language I have understanding of, and the other suggestion does not appeal at all, however . . .
Shakespeare wrote plays, and also sonnets . . .
"Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Shakespeare wrote plays, and also sonnets . . .
"Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate. Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, And summer’s lease hath all too short a date. Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, And often is his gold complexion dimmed; And every fair from fair sometime declines, By chance, or nature’s changing course, untrimmed; But thy eternal summer shall not fade, Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow’st, Nor shall death brag thou wand’rest in his shade, When in eternal lines to Time thou grow’st. So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee."
And in translation?
You're cool.Get your knickers off!(c) 2ndwitch, 30/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 29
Today's prompt is "I remember".
I remember the pattern on the curtains, the light from the street lamps
Piercing them via the uneven weave.
I remember the sound of the trains, passing in the night,
Carrying the mail.
I remember the puddle of oil in the garage, lurking on a tray
Beneath the old car.
I remember the smell of the workshop, old tools and papers,
Mingling in the half light.
I remember the pad of the dog's paws, helter skelter on
The garden path.
I remember the travel sickness of the back seat, and the extra strong
Mints that were the cure.
I remember the smell of egg sandwiches, and the complaints of the
Other children who had ham or cheese.
I remember how the outhouse door jammed, and the effort needed
To open or shut it.
I remember the corroded rust of the bars that supported the swing seat
And the creak as I rose to look over the garage roof.
I remember the hiding places, the dens, the lonely paths, the call of
The stock on the moss.
I remember the bird song, the wordless stories of a land far away,
And a life elsewhere.
(c) 2ndwitch, 29/04/16
I remember the pattern on the curtains, the light from the street lamps
Piercing them via the uneven weave.
I remember the sound of the trains, passing in the night,
Carrying the mail.
I remember the puddle of oil in the garage, lurking on a tray
Beneath the old car.
I remember the smell of the workshop, old tools and papers,
Mingling in the half light.
I remember the pad of the dog's paws, helter skelter on
The garden path.
I remember the travel sickness of the back seat, and the extra strong
Mints that were the cure.
I remember the smell of egg sandwiches, and the complaints of the
Other children who had ham or cheese.
I remember how the outhouse door jammed, and the effort needed
To open or shut it.
I remember the corroded rust of the bars that supported the swing seat
And the creak as I rose to look over the garage roof.
I remember the hiding places, the dens, the lonely paths, the call of
The stock on the moss.
I remember the bird song, the wordless stories of a land far away,
And a life elsewhere.
(c) 2ndwitch, 29/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 28
Today's prompt is to write a story backwards.
Sleep.
Eat.
Travel.
Talk.
Drink.
Eat.
Talk.
Write.
Drink.
Travel.
Eat.
Drink.
Sleep.
(c) 2ndwitch, 28/04/16
Sleep.
Eat.
Travel.
Talk.
Drink.
Eat.
Talk.
Write.
Drink.
Travel.
Eat.
Drink.
Sleep.
(c) 2ndwitch, 28/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 27
Today's prompt is to write a poem with very long lines.
The pastime of observing people as they proceed about their business without knowing that they are being observed is one that compels and fascinates.
People do odd things.
People pick their nose, scratch their crotch, fart, burp quietly or loudly, some sneeze without concern for the spit and snot and they are spraying over anyone nearby.
People can be unpleasant.
A woman can walk along the street and never once get her stiletto heel stuck in one of the cracks between the paving stones and keep her balance whilst swerving round the drunken man.
People can be harsh.
A man can walk from his train to his office and never once realise that the three different people sat, genderless on the cold ground, empty coffee cup importuning for change, are people as well.
People.
(c) 2ndwitch, 27/04/16
The pastime of observing people as they proceed about their business without knowing that they are being observed is one that compels and fascinates.
People do odd things.
People pick their nose, scratch their crotch, fart, burp quietly or loudly, some sneeze without concern for the spit and snot and they are spraying over anyone nearby.
People can be unpleasant.
A woman can walk along the street and never once get her stiletto heel stuck in one of the cracks between the paving stones and keep her balance whilst swerving round the drunken man.
People can be harsh.
A man can walk from his train to his office and never once realise that the three different people sat, genderless on the cold ground, empty coffee cup importuning for change, are people as well.
People.
(c) 2ndwitch, 27/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 26
Today's prompt is to write a call and answer poem.
We should abolish taxes.
No, we shouldn't.
We should make each person look to themselves.
No, we shouldn't.
We should end free healthcare.
No, we shouldn't.
We should cut welfare.
No, we shouldn't.
We should stop supporting the sick who cannot support themselves.
No, we shouldn't.
We should rid the world of the insidious left wing soft hearted liberal mealymouthed lazy sorts who won't work and don't contribute.
No, we shouldn't.
(c) 2ndwitch, 26/04/16
We should abolish taxes.
No, we shouldn't.
We should make each person look to themselves.
No, we shouldn't.
We should end free healthcare.
No, we shouldn't.
We should cut welfare.
No, we shouldn't.
We should stop supporting the sick who cannot support themselves.
No, we shouldn't.
We should rid the world of the insidious left wing soft hearted liberal mealymouthed lazy sorts who won't work and don't contribute.
No, we shouldn't.
(c) 2ndwitch, 26/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 25
Today's prompt is to start with a line from another poem.
Though they go mad they shall be sane,
And all shall listen to the words they did not say;
Shouts and screams will puncture the soft mist
Of the newly dawning day, and memory, fickle memory
Shall twist and turn its convoluted tales, torturing
The recollections into a shape that shall not
Offend the vicar.
(c) 2ndwitch, 25/04/16
Though they go mad they shall be sane,
And all shall listen to the words they did not say;
Shouts and screams will puncture the soft mist
Of the newly dawning day, and memory, fickle memory
Shall twist and turn its convoluted tales, torturing
The recollections into a shape that shall not
Offend the vicar.
(c) 2ndwitch, 25/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 24
Today's prompt is to write a mix and match poem.
The table cloth of the silvered loch presented the small boat buffet
And a motorbike zoomed past.
The sea eagles wheeled and veered, dividing the sky between them
As a sparrow pecked at picnic crumbs.
The late afternoon buzzing of pollen drunk bees undulated
As a tired toddler dropped her ice cream.
(c) 2ndwitch, 24/04/16
The table cloth of the silvered loch presented the small boat buffet
And a motorbike zoomed past.
The sea eagles wheeled and veered, dividing the sky between them
As a sparrow pecked at picnic crumbs.
The late afternoon buzzing of pollen drunk bees undulated
As a tired toddler dropped her ice cream.
(c) 2ndwitch, 24/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 23
Today's prompt is write some sort of sonnet.
Why does home made bread take so long to toast?
Why does the browning crumb appear so late?
Like meat, in cooler over, slow to roast
But the taste is so truly worth the wait?
The light and fluffy bread bought from a shop
Will toast to brown so fast you must take care
To watch it carefully, so you can stop
The toasting process ere it flaming flares.
Perhaps tis a denser bread, the firmer slice
When made at home with wholesome flour and oat?
Perhaps the moisture makes the heat think twice
And stops a charcoal toast to get your goat?
Whate'er reason, the truth it still remains
Home made bread takes time, toasted state to gain!
(c) 2ndwitch, 23/04/16
Why does home made bread take so long to toast?
Why does the browning crumb appear so late?
Like meat, in cooler over, slow to roast
But the taste is so truly worth the wait?
The light and fluffy bread bought from a shop
Will toast to brown so fast you must take care
To watch it carefully, so you can stop
The toasting process ere it flaming flares.
Perhaps tis a denser bread, the firmer slice
When made at home with wholesome flour and oat?
Perhaps the moisture makes the heat think twice
And stops a charcoal toast to get your goat?
Whate'er reason, the truth it still remains
Home made bread takes time, toasted state to gain!
(c) 2ndwitch, 23/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 22
Today's prompt is Earth Day.
We live on a planet,
It is in our care,
We have nowhere else to go.
We do not hear the whale scream,
We ignore the trees' tears,
And soon we may have nowhere to live.
(c) 2ndwitch, 22/04/16
We live on a planet,
It is in our care,
We have nowhere else to go.
We do not hear the whale scream,
We ignore the trees' tears,
And soon we may have nowhere to live.
(c) 2ndwitch, 22/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 21
Today's prompt is to write from the perspective of a minor character in a myth or fairy tale.
I am what I am.
I know this upsets some people.
But I am simply what I am.
It is getting harder and harder
To find food.
People are wary, they avoid me,
They make me an outcast,
So what am I supposed to do?
I only want someone now and then,
I can live on small mice and leaves
A lot of the time.
But now and then I want real meat.
So please don't blame me
For eating Granny,
Or for trying to get some
Nice young Red Riding Hood flesh.
I bet you like spring lamb, don't you?
(c) 2ndwitch, 21/04/16
I am what I am.
I know this upsets some people.
But I am simply what I am.
It is getting harder and harder
To find food.
People are wary, they avoid me,
They make me an outcast,
So what am I supposed to do?
I only want someone now and then,
I can live on small mice and leaves
A lot of the time.
But now and then I want real meat.
So please don't blame me
For eating Granny,
Or for trying to get some
Nice young Red Riding Hood flesh.
I bet you like spring lamb, don't you?
(c) 2ndwitch, 21/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 20
Today's prompt is to write a 'kenning' poem.
A gift of giving, future-bringing,
Set to work time and again each day.
A power-house of promise, song-singing,
Standing by to lubricate the day.
The simple act of use is so complete,
And the action helps to smooth our way.
This haven of comfort, always there
This steaming heart of lives' long way.
(c) 2ndwitch, 20/04/16
A gift of giving, future-bringing,
Set to work time and again each day.
A power-house of promise, song-singing,
Standing by to lubricate the day.
The simple act of use is so complete,
And the action helps to smooth our way.
This haven of comfort, always there
This steaming heart of lives' long way.
(c) 2ndwitch, 20/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 19
Today's prompt is a didactic poem, a poetic instruction manual.
Always have a mug of tea in the morning.
Always stop and stare.
Smell the coffee, and the rain on bare earth.
Watch the rainbow.
Watch the sun dance on the raindrops.
Listen to the song of the birds.
Hear the trees as they whisper, leaf to leaf,
And catch the mythical falling star.
Do these things if you want to stay sane.
(c)2ndwitch, 19/04/16
Always have a mug of tea in the morning.
Always stop and stare.
Smell the coffee, and the rain on bare earth.
Watch the rainbow.
Watch the sun dance on the raindrops.
Listen to the song of the birds.
Hear the trees as they whisper, leaf to leaf,
And catch the mythical falling star.
Do these things if you want to stay sane.
(c)2ndwitch, 19/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 18
Today's prompt is the sound of home.
Back there, where voices are warm and
I understand all that they say
I'm someone's love, someone says
Ta chuck, and reassures me that
It'll all come out in the wash.
(c) 2ndwitch, 18/04/16
Back there, where voices are warm and
I understand all that they say
I'm someone's love, someone says
Ta chuck, and reassures me that
It'll all come out in the wash.
(c) 2ndwitch, 18/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 17
Today the prompt is to use at least ten words from a specialised dictionary.
Unfortunately I do not have such a beast that I can think of, so, this is an alternative take.
I did not find
The plastic box that
I was looking for
But I did find
A different one
That was where
It should not be
Which means I
Signed the log
And made a note
About the
Throwdown
And checked
To see if a bug
Wanted to travel
And then when
I got home
I logged my log
And remembered
To add that I had
Taken nothing
And left nothing
But I had
Followed
The Arrow.
(c) 2ndwitch, 17/04/16
Unfortunately I do not have such a beast that I can think of, so, this is an alternative take.
I did not find
The plastic box that
I was looking for
But I did find
A different one
That was where
It should not be
Which means I
Signed the log
And made a note
About the
Throwdown
And checked
To see if a bug
Wanted to travel
And then when
I got home
I logged my log
And remembered
To add that I had
Taken nothing
And left nothing
But I had
Followed
The Arrow.
(c) 2ndwitch, 17/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 16
Today the prompt was to fill in 'almanac questions' and write about one or more answers.
Low white, or greying stone, squat
Upon the green grass, sheep dotted
And lonely, with a rising curlew's cry.
Slate, and chimneyed, roof, strong
Against the seaborne wind, and
Beaten painted wooden door, closed
Against the driving rain.
Deep windows old behind them
The secrets of long life, and a
History that does not hide
Many skeletons, or keep the treasure
Of memory in a locked kist.
(c) 2ndwitch, 16/04/16
Low white, or greying stone, squat
Upon the green grass, sheep dotted
And lonely, with a rising curlew's cry.
Slate, and chimneyed, roof, strong
Against the seaborne wind, and
Beaten painted wooden door, closed
Against the driving rain.
Deep windows old behind them
The secrets of long life, and a
History that does not hide
Many skeletons, or keep the treasure
Of memory in a locked kist.
(c) 2ndwitch, 16/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 15
Today the prompt is 'doubles'.
two feet
two hands
two eyes
two arms
two legs
two ears
two faces
(c) 2ndwitch, 15/04/16
two feet
two hands
two eyes
two arms
two legs
two ears
two faces
(c) 2ndwitch, 15/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 14
Today's prompt is to write a san san.
a b c a b d c d
Across the water the sunlight whirls
As though the music called to dance
And the watching clouds are weeping.
But then the music speeds and hurls
And the clouds give passing glance
To the broken light of one life below
For music still the dance is keeping
To strict time, we simply cannot know.
(c) 2ndwitch, 14/04/16
a b c a b d c d
Across the water the sunlight whirls
As though the music called to dance
And the watching clouds are weeping.
But then the music speeds and hurls
And the clouds give passing glance
To the broken light of one life below
For music still the dance is keeping
To strict time, we simply cannot know.
(c) 2ndwitch, 14/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 13
Today the prompt is a fortune cookie.
You will live a long life.
You will die tomorrow.
You will find true love.
You will remain single.
You will make much money.
You will die penniless.
And of course, you may
Also break your teeth trying
To eat the hard and
Tasteless biscuit that surrounds
The meaningless words
You will read.
(c) 2ndwitch, 13/04/16
You will live a long life.
You will die tomorrow.
You will find true love.
You will remain single.
You will make much money.
You will die penniless.
And of course, you may
Also break your teeth trying
To eat the hard and
Tasteless biscuit that surrounds
The meaningless words
You will read.
(c) 2ndwitch, 13/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 12
The prompt for this is to use an index. I have to confess that it means nothing to me, and the example given was singly uninspiring as well! Hey ho . . .
On page one you will find
An Introduction.
Page 3 will expound the
Purpose of this
Piece of writing.
Hopefully.
On page 47 there
Will begin a new
Chapter, wherein
The argument will be
Set out.
On page 90 the
Argument will continue
With an opposing
Perspective being
Considered.
On page 126 there
Will be a futile attempt
To arrive at a conclusion.
By page 154 you
Will have lost
All
The
Will
To
Live.
(c) 2ndwitch, 12/04/16
On page one you will find
An Introduction.
Page 3 will expound the
Purpose of this
Piece of writing.
Hopefully.
On page 47 there
Will begin a new
Chapter, wherein
The argument will be
Set out.
On page 90 the
Argument will continue
With an opposing
Perspective being
Considered.
On page 126 there
Will be a futile attempt
To arrive at a conclusion.
By page 154 you
Will have lost
All
The
Will
To
Live.
(c) 2ndwitch, 12/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 11
Today's prompt is a descriptive poem with a twist.
Tables, in rows, with a vase
Of plastic flowers on each.
Note the ring mark from
A wet cup, and the
Scratch that crosses the
Faded marks from the cloth
Used often to clean.
Streetlights illuminate the night.
(c) 2ndwitch, 11/04/16
Tables, in rows, with a vase
Of plastic flowers on each.
Note the ring mark from
A wet cup, and the
Scratch that crosses the
Faded marks from the cloth
Used often to clean.
Streetlights illuminate the night.
(c) 2ndwitch, 11/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 10
Today's prompt is to use book titles. Taking this literally . . .
Vegetarian Cookery, part 1
Vegetarian Cookery, part 2
Good Housekeeping.
But actually,
I usually cook
From memory
And knowledge!
(c) 2ndwitch, 10/04/16
Vegetarian Cookery, part 1
Vegetarian Cookery, part 2
Good Housekeeping.
But actually,
I usually cook
From memory
And knowledge!
(c) 2ndwitch, 10/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 09
Today I am supposed to write a poem that includes that line that I find it hard to say. In my case a word.
The idea
Was to write
A poem
That enabled
Or forced
Me to
Articulate
A comment
Or sentiment
That is
Difficult
For me.
But instead
I am writing
A poem
With a word
That I find
Very hard
To actually
Say,
Namely
Differentiation.
(c) 2ndwitch, 09/04/16
The idea
Was to write
A poem
That enabled
Or forced
Me to
Articulate
A comment
Or sentiment
That is
Difficult
For me.
But instead
I am writing
A poem
With a word
That I find
Very hard
To actually
Say,
Namely
Differentiation.
(c) 2ndwitch, 09/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 08
Today's prompt is to write about a flower.
A flower grows,
Sometimes in the ground
Or in a pot
Or in another
Similar type of
Place.
Flour,
On the other hand,
Is used for
Baking
And cooking.
In case you
Were wondering
About
The difference.
(c) 2ndwitch, 08/04/16
A flower grows,
Sometimes in the ground
Or in a pot
Or in another
Similar type of
Place.
Flour,
On the other hand,
Is used for
Baking
And cooking.
In case you
Were wondering
About
The difference.
(c) 2ndwitch, 08/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 07
Today's prompt is to write a Tritina.
the winter months bring rain from dark grey clouds
and drown the last remaining memories of summer
leaving deadened leaves and fetid flowers to decay
falling leaves of autumn on brittle branches decay
and reach in silent supplication to the clouds
but the wind that howls drowns out the song of summer
if only beach long days could conjure for us summer
and the sun could turn the tide, and make the snow decay
then hide the ice behind the spring-wrung clouds
for winter does decay the summer clouds
(c) 2ndwitch, 07/04/2016
the winter months bring rain from dark grey clouds
and drown the last remaining memories of summer
leaving deadened leaves and fetid flowers to decay
falling leaves of autumn on brittle branches decay
and reach in silent supplication to the clouds
but the wind that howls drowns out the song of summer
if only beach long days could conjure for us summer
and the sun could turn the tide, and make the snow decay
then hide the ice behind the spring-wrung clouds
for winter does decay the summer clouds
(c) 2ndwitch, 07/04/2016
NaPoWriMo 2016 06
Today's prompt is food.
I like food.
I eat food.
Not all food,
Of course,
But I like enough
Types of food
For my needs.
© 2ndwitch, 06/04/16
I like food.
I eat food.
Not all food,
Of course,
But I like enough
Types of food
For my needs.
© 2ndwitch, 06/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 05
Today the prompt is 'heirloom seeds', with interesting names . . . but I have actually chosen old roses. Because!
Jacques Cartier, William Lobb and
Baron Girod de L'Ain
All met to chat
Again and again and again.
They never invited me, though.
© 2ndwitch, 05/04/16
Jacques Cartier, William Lobb and
Baron Girod de L'Ain
All met to chat
Again and again and again.
They never invited me, though.
© 2ndwitch, 05/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 04
Today's prompt is to write about the worst month, or the cruellest.
All months have their reasons
To claim the crown of cruellest season;
But the cruellest month of all
Is
July.
And it always will be.
© 2ndwitch, 04/04/16
All months have their reasons
To claim the crown of cruellest season;
But the cruellest month of all
Is
July.
And it always will be.
© 2ndwitch, 04/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 03
Today the challenge is to write a letter to a celebrity, a fan letter. Mmmm . . .
There are those whose work I like
And those who give me pleasure.
There are those who use a mic,
And those who trip a measure.
Some use paints and pens,
Others play the fiddle,
Whilst some look through a lens
And some make life a riddle.
All of these and many more
Light life's darkest hours.
But none inspire a sense of awe
Of personkind, as flowers
Can, or hills, or lochs, or mighty trees,
No fanlike worship on bended knees.
So this is not a fan letter, after all.
Sorry.
© 2ndwitch, 03/04/16
There are those whose work I like
And those who give me pleasure.
There are those who use a mic,
And those who trip a measure.
Some use paints and pens,
Others play the fiddle,
Whilst some look through a lens
And some make life a riddle.
All of these and many more
Light life's darkest hours.
But none inspire a sense of awe
Of personkind, as flowers
Can, or hills, or lochs, or mighty trees,
No fanlike worship on bended knees.
So this is not a fan letter, after all.
Sorry.
© 2ndwitch, 03/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 02
A Family Portrait, or that is what the prompt says.
take it apart,
again,
rebuild.
destroy,
complain
again.
an empty space
where you
used to be.
arrogant
or confident?
sloth is
one of the
deadly sins,
I understand?
© 2ndwitch, 02/04/16
take it apart,
again,
rebuild.
destroy,
complain
again.
an empty space
where you
used to be.
arrogant
or confident?
sloth is
one of the
deadly sins,
I understand?
© 2ndwitch, 02/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2016 01
A lune, a poem with a 5 3 5 pattern, 3 lines with the listed number of syllables or words.
April, a month in spring
Started this day
And will end another day.
© 2ndwitch, 01/04/16
April, a month in spring
Started this day
And will end another day.
© 2ndwitch, 01/04/16
NaPoWriMo 2015 30
Today is the end.
So, in the end, we simply sat and drank tea.
No-one had thought to bring apples;
The sandwiches for lunch were forgotten;
The biscuits all got crumbed in their packet;
The coffee planned for mid-morning was cold;
The toast was burned black;
The fried eggs all had broken yokes;
The cat knocked the orange juice off the table;
The dog was sick on the sofa;
The day started badly and went downhill.
© 2ndwitch, 30/04/15
So, in the end, we simply sat and drank tea.
No-one had thought to bring apples;
The sandwiches for lunch were forgotten;
The biscuits all got crumbed in their packet;
The coffee planned for mid-morning was cold;
The toast was burned black;
The fried eggs all had broken yokes;
The cat knocked the orange juice off the table;
The dog was sick on the sofa;
The day started badly and went downhill.
© 2ndwitch, 30/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 29
Today we shall review.
A busy room, the seats slowly fill up, and there is
An air of expectancy. One almost expects to hear
The gentle disharmony of tuning strings, swelling
Slowly to a climactic A, and then dying away.
But no, there is just the undulating murmur of
Talk that ebbs and flows, a clink of glasses and
Scraping of chairs as people take their seats and
Settle into place.
First there is a support band, lauded by its
Introduction as entertaining and enjoyable, and
The audience sits back and waits. The support is
Good enough, but they do not capture the
Attention sufficiently to bring the room to a
Peak of silent appreciation, and soon enough
They are finished, and we await the main act.
The skirl of the pipes, the beat of a drum, the singing
Fiddle's tune, all underpinned by a solid and
Harmonious guitar.
Who knew? We all did. We have known this
Band for many years, and tonight they did not
Disappoint. They married the old with the new,
The young with the old, the tender with the bludgeon,
And their voices woven together in closest harmony
Threaded through the jigs, the reels and the marches.
All too soon the climax was reached, and the
End hove in sight. The sheer uplifting energy
Of music that is timeless, paired with a life-love
That is encapsulated in the faces, the voices and the hands
Of those who play. This is perfection. This is
What music is all about. Five stars, oh yes, five stars.
© 2ndwitch, 29/04/15
A busy room, the seats slowly fill up, and there is
An air of expectancy. One almost expects to hear
The gentle disharmony of tuning strings, swelling
Slowly to a climactic A, and then dying away.
But no, there is just the undulating murmur of
Talk that ebbs and flows, a clink of glasses and
Scraping of chairs as people take their seats and
Settle into place.
First there is a support band, lauded by its
Introduction as entertaining and enjoyable, and
The audience sits back and waits. The support is
Good enough, but they do not capture the
Attention sufficiently to bring the room to a
Peak of silent appreciation, and soon enough
They are finished, and we await the main act.
The skirl of the pipes, the beat of a drum, the singing
Fiddle's tune, all underpinned by a solid and
Harmonious guitar.
Who knew? We all did. We have known this
Band for many years, and tonight they did not
Disappoint. They married the old with the new,
The young with the old, the tender with the bludgeon,
And their voices woven together in closest harmony
Threaded through the jigs, the reels and the marches.
All too soon the climax was reached, and the
End hove in sight. The sheer uplifting energy
Of music that is timeless, paired with a life-love
That is encapsulated in the faces, the voices and the hands
Of those who play. This is perfection. This is
What music is all about. Five stars, oh yes, five stars.
© 2ndwitch, 29/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 28
Today we cross a bridge . . .
Blue sky-arch reaches out from island shore,
And softly lays its head upon the land.
Summer air, bee-buzzing, swoop-winging o'er,
And ev'ning heat guards all with sun-warm hand.
The ancient stones are guarding waters run,
And boats are swinging softly on the tide.
The trees hang low, all tired now, from the sun
And gulls are standing by the waterside.
The bridge that stands and holds the road to keep
The path from isle to mainland, strong and low,
Carries mem'ries footprint, old thoughts sunk deep
Into the pitted tar, o'er waters flow.
And ever still the wild Atlantic stream
Will pass this way, the harbinger of dreams.
© 2ndwitch, 28/04/15
Inspired by visiting The Bridge Over the Atlantic last summer.
Blue sky-arch reaches out from island shore,
And softly lays its head upon the land.
Summer air, bee-buzzing, swoop-winging o'er,
And ev'ning heat guards all with sun-warm hand.
The ancient stones are guarding waters run,
And boats are swinging softly on the tide.
The trees hang low, all tired now, from the sun
And gulls are standing by the waterside.
The bridge that stands and holds the road to keep
The path from isle to mainland, strong and low,
Carries mem'ries footprint, old thoughts sunk deep
Into the pitted tar, o'er waters flow.
And ever still the wild Atlantic stream
Will pass this way, the harbinger of dreams.
© 2ndwitch, 28/04/15
Inspired by visiting The Bridge Over the Atlantic last summer.
NaPoWriMo 2015 27
Today the hay(na)ku sonnet is served.
Single
Cream lacks
Strength for whipping.
Double
Cream is
Thick and slow.
Whipping
Cream flows
But also stiffens.
Milk
Is simply
Not like cream.
And, really, though,
It doesn't matter.
© 2ndwitch, 27/04/15
Single
Cream lacks
Strength for whipping.
Double
Cream is
Thick and slow.
Whipping
Cream flows
But also stiffens.
Milk
Is simply
Not like cream.
And, really, though,
It doesn't matter.
© 2ndwitch, 27/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 26
Today I am not being me.
Cool, what fun, let's go,
Come on, come on, come on,
There's water to splash in and
A ball to chase, and
A child to run with, and
Sand to bounce on, and
Stones to pick up and drop, and
A wee biscuit to steal, and
More water to splash in, and
That ball to chase again, and
Seaweed to try and eat, and
Another child to run with, and
A man to shout my name, and
A friend to bounce and jump with, and
Another stone to pick up, and
Some mud to tread in, and
Then it's time to go.
Yawn.
Can we do it again tomorrow?
And in the meantime, the finds
Included two large spanners, which
Were not in the works, and one
Welly that did not have a pair,
And a lot of thin green gloves,
And loads of nuts and bolts.
And the obligatory used condom.
© 2ndwitch, 26/04/15
Cool, what fun, let's go,
Come on, come on, come on,
There's water to splash in and
A ball to chase, and
A child to run with, and
Sand to bounce on, and
Stones to pick up and drop, and
A wee biscuit to steal, and
More water to splash in, and
That ball to chase again, and
Seaweed to try and eat, and
Another child to run with, and
A man to shout my name, and
A friend to bounce and jump with, and
Another stone to pick up, and
Some mud to tread in, and
Then it's time to go.
Yawn.
Can we do it again tomorrow?
And in the meantime, the finds
Included two large spanners, which
Were not in the works, and one
Welly that did not have a pair,
And a lot of thin green gloves,
And loads of nuts and bolts.
And the obligatory used condom.
© 2ndwitch, 26/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 25
Today we address the personless clerihew.
An odd thing to do,
It's admittedly insane,
But will not cause pain,
The reading of books
Is much simpler than it looks
If you avoid the absurd
And just read word after word.
The writing of stories
And preservation of glories
Can be done once or twice
More often's just not that nice.
© 2ndwitch, 25/04/15
An odd thing to do,
It's admittedly insane,
But will not cause pain,
The reading of books
Is much simpler than it looks
If you avoid the absurd
And just read word after word.
The writing of stories
And preservation of glories
Can be done once or twice
More often's just not that nice.
© 2ndwitch, 25/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 24
Today we are stopping in snow . . .
Whose world this is I think I know
They live upon it not in it though
They do not see me stopping here
To watch it die, fade beneath the snow.
An interstellar traveller must think it queer
To treat so harshly our planet green and dear
Between the sun, and the depths of space
This darkest evening of the year.
He'd look with shock, give his head a shake
And ask if there is some mistake,
The only sound the downward sweep
Of barren wind and frozen flake.
This world was lovely, dark and deep
We have broken promises to keep
And a lifetime to go before I sleep
And a lifetime to go before I sleep.
© 2ndwitch, 24/04015
Based upon the famous poem by Robert Frost 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening'.
Whose world this is I think I know
They live upon it not in it though
They do not see me stopping here
To watch it die, fade beneath the snow.
An interstellar traveller must think it queer
To treat so harshly our planet green and dear
Between the sun, and the depths of space
This darkest evening of the year.
He'd look with shock, give his head a shake
And ask if there is some mistake,
The only sound the downward sweep
Of barren wind and frozen flake.
This world was lovely, dark and deep
We have broken promises to keep
And a lifetime to go before I sleep
And a lifetime to go before I sleep.
© 2ndwitch, 24/04015
Based upon the famous poem by Robert Frost 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening'.
NaPoWriMo 2015 23
Today we are free.
But not truly so, as it is not possible to consider anyone
Bound into the human condition to have achieved any
Real iteration of freedom, in the not-being-bound-by-
Whatever-chains-that-you-perceive fashion. And
For each of us those chains are our own making, and
Of our own acceptance. We walk this earth, each step
Making another infinitesimal imprint on the land, and
We drag the chains that have held our minds, that bind
Our hands, that gag our lips, and we haul them with us
On every step of our mortal journey. No prayer can
Relieve us of their weight, no sacrifice can bury them
In a deep grave, and no amount of tears will ever
Dissolve them, our immortal and eternal chains.
So we can but embrace the temporary illusion
Of freedom, as when floating, in water, or perhaps
Free-falling through space and time. We can turn our
Faces to the sun, and welcome its fair glance, we can turn
Our eyes to the world that surrounds us, seek out the
New growth, the fresh leaves, the budding flower, and
We can but take solace from such small glimpses
Of the true heaven. We can look for angels' wings
In the soaring bird-flight of the seagull, in the circling
Majesty of the waiting buzzard, or in the darting
Flash of the bluetit. We can look for the shine of
Angels' eyes in the sparkle of the chattering stream,
As it hurries on its way over rock and stone, down
Waterfall and through ferny glen. And in these things,
In these things, perhaps we can find freedom.
© 2nwitch, 23/04/15
But not truly so, as it is not possible to consider anyone
Bound into the human condition to have achieved any
Real iteration of freedom, in the not-being-bound-by-
Whatever-chains-that-you-perceive fashion. And
For each of us those chains are our own making, and
Of our own acceptance. We walk this earth, each step
Making another infinitesimal imprint on the land, and
We drag the chains that have held our minds, that bind
Our hands, that gag our lips, and we haul them with us
On every step of our mortal journey. No prayer can
Relieve us of their weight, no sacrifice can bury them
In a deep grave, and no amount of tears will ever
Dissolve them, our immortal and eternal chains.
So we can but embrace the temporary illusion
Of freedom, as when floating, in water, or perhaps
Free-falling through space and time. We can turn our
Faces to the sun, and welcome its fair glance, we can turn
Our eyes to the world that surrounds us, seek out the
New growth, the fresh leaves, the budding flower, and
We can but take solace from such small glimpses
Of the true heaven. We can look for angels' wings
In the soaring bird-flight of the seagull, in the circling
Majesty of the waiting buzzard, or in the darting
Flash of the bluetit. We can look for the shine of
Angels' eyes in the sparkle of the chattering stream,
As it hurries on its way over rock and stone, down
Waterfall and through ferny glen. And in these things,
In these things, perhaps we can find freedom.
© 2nwitch, 23/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 22
Today we are pastoral.
Come away, shepherd, come away, and dance
And sing with me. Join your voice
With mine in hymns of praise, for
This land that feeds us.
Praise with me the modified corn
That grows for miles on the dust-filled
Prairie, and join your voice in
Happy refrain in recognition of
The acres planted with cloned carrots,
All the same, and repellent to carrot
Fly; then in our verse of honour, consider
The humble potato, no chance of blight,
Bred to be smashed into submission
And reformed as a 'french fry' in
Burgalds grease-ridden plastic cafe;
And in our next refrain, remember there
The pens of pigs, on mud and ancient
Straw, unable to turn, but feeding all
The time to fatten for the bacon
That we will eat in the morning.
And then think, dear shepherd, think
Of the lambs that used to sport and play
On fields of green, that now frolic in
Barns and on barren land. And dine with me,
Oh shepherd fair, on lamb chops from
New Zealand, freshly imported from half
Way round this world. And lastly remember
The chickens that cannot stretch their wings,
That live in cages as long as they continue
To lay their eggs.
Come away, dear shepherd, come away,
And weep with me, for the poison we
Have buried deep in this fertile land,
And for the pollution we have created
In the name of progress and an easy life.
© 2ndwitch, 22/04/15
Come away, shepherd, come away, and dance
And sing with me. Join your voice
With mine in hymns of praise, for
This land that feeds us.
Praise with me the modified corn
That grows for miles on the dust-filled
Prairie, and join your voice in
Happy refrain in recognition of
The acres planted with cloned carrots,
All the same, and repellent to carrot
Fly; then in our verse of honour, consider
The humble potato, no chance of blight,
Bred to be smashed into submission
And reformed as a 'french fry' in
Burgalds grease-ridden plastic cafe;
And in our next refrain, remember there
The pens of pigs, on mud and ancient
Straw, unable to turn, but feeding all
The time to fatten for the bacon
That we will eat in the morning.
And then think, dear shepherd, think
Of the lambs that used to sport and play
On fields of green, that now frolic in
Barns and on barren land. And dine with me,
Oh shepherd fair, on lamb chops from
New Zealand, freshly imported from half
Way round this world. And lastly remember
The chickens that cannot stretch their wings,
That live in cages as long as they continue
To lay their eggs.
Come away, dear shepherd, come away,
And weep with me, for the poison we
Have buried deep in this fertile land,
And for the pollution we have created
In the name of progress and an easy life.
© 2ndwitch, 22/04/15
NaPoWriMo 2015 21
Today we are stealing the words of others.
But out of context.
And oddly.
In a weird way.
analogies
as such
makes them open
and
evaluation
be analysed.
bad
with
arguing
organic
societies.
features common
be described
technique similar to
questions
if we look
some
is the tendency of
what exists
seem to
it is nevertheless
analyst
function
rather than negative
body,
no
from the analogy in
a second point.
© 2ndwitch, 21/04/14
But out of context.
And oddly.
In a weird way.
analogies
as such
makes them open
and
evaluation
be analysed.
bad
with
arguing
organic
societies.
features common
be described
technique similar to
questions
if we look
some
is the tendency of
what exists
seem to
it is nevertheless
analyst
function
rather than negative
body,
no
from the analogy in
a second point.
© 2ndwitch, 21/04/14
NaPoWriMo 2015 20
Today we know things.
monday is the first day of
the week when we begin
thinking is the precursor to
action man was a popular
toy dogs look like stuffed
animals that are allowed to
graze on your knee from falling
off your bike to grab a cold
drink is one of the evils that
our grandparents were often not
approving loans is the job of bank
staff rooms can be very untidy
places to visit when on
holiday insurance is sold by
many airlines use a range of
airports charge far too much for
coffee
© 2ndwitch, 20/04/15
monday is the first day of
the week when we begin
thinking is the precursor to
action man was a popular
toy dogs look like stuffed
animals that are allowed to
graze on your knee from falling
off your bike to grab a cold
drink is one of the evils that
our grandparents were often not
approving loans is the job of bank
staff rooms can be very untidy
places to visit when on
holiday insurance is sold by
many airlines use a range of
airports charge far too much for
coffee
© 2ndwitch, 20/04/15
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