Friday 30 December 2011

Cold Fusion


As I read the white pages
I see the creeping cold
words, once bold
are seeping
through a gathering frost
that coats the pages
and ices up the meanings

The pages become brittle
and I hear the howl
of a gathering gale
in futured fractured chapters
Promised laughter
will be frozen
on the lips

Words drift upwards
to my watching eyes
and drip syllables
onto a whitened
and frozen tome
rigid, cold and still
I and the book now one

Killing Fields

Killing fields in time;
harvesting eternal death
Nature's solution

Wednesday 21 December 2011

Two line Haiku

Bogart; White House;
Casablanca

Tuesday 20 December 2011

Snowman

This is my first attempt at a Haiku 5-7-5 syllable poem. I think it works...

Snowman
Snowman carrot nose;
For children he lives for moments
In iced pool grave laid

Thursday 15 December 2011

Deus Vult

Jerusalem's great walls called
the Faithful from afar
and nations rose and marched
in journey to Jerusalem

It's highest walls were stormed
the Faithful climbed and fell
upon all who dwelt inside
inside Jerusalem

Black Templars led the host
that crossed the Holy Land
with 'Deus Vult' the cry
cry for Jerusalem

With scimitar and sword
God's Holy Work was done
and a thousand Christs were crucified
all for Jersualem

Now all the Gods are dead
the Templars and the host
new people tread on bones
inside Jerusalem

Wednesday 7 December 2011

The Raiders

 

North Sea, dark swirling mist
black night, dragon prow
oar blades dip, cold waters
slip beneath them

Shepherds drowse amongst
their flocks, night grazing
all minds asleep
to the coming storm

Village and abbey's lights
dim down, false comfort
long ships draw in
within the blighted night

Waves crash, ships crash
against the glimmering shore
shields rattle and feet splash
howling the storm sweeps in

Arms raised
in terror, no defence
all slain, all burnt, all done
the abbey burns
the raiders soon are gone

In dreams I walk

In dreams I walk
where daytime sees no footsteps
to farther shores
dark, shrouded and unknown
In dreams I walk
through ravines deep and misted
to mountain tops
where I should never go

In dreams I walk
dark passages forbidden
to deeper depths
where darkness reigns supreme
In dreams I walk
and glimpse grey shapes long hidden
from daytime's sight
from where I dare not dream

In dreams I walk
to palaces all ruined
where crumbling towers
fall roughly to the ground
In dreams I walk
yet still I see no ending
to this bleak place
where I walk alone

Saturday 3 December 2011

New magazine planned

I am planning on starting a small magazine, strictly non profit to foster new and existing unpublished poems, prose, essays etc. The name will be 'Portals' and I have started a basic website HERE
Anything you have feel free to send it in. The email address for submissions is portals@writeme.com

Thursday 1 December 2011

Thinking about poetry...

I have with a lady companion being going to quite a few poetry readings of late. They have been very varied. VERY varied! From a disastrous and embarassing night at an charity bookshop which held out a night of poetry reading, the subject being 'One Million' and the remarkable fact that none of the half dozen or so 'poems' read out so badly even touched upon the theme. One was in fact a gross insult of couplet rhymed doggerel about how great the late Jimmy Saville was (take that or leave it as you will).
Last night was a different story with six poets reading all of them published ones (not that that matters) and although again some left me cold - and two left me nauseous - two others brought me elation. There was an absolutely super one (I'm watching too much re-runs of Ab-Fab) on the subject of the poet's little toe, well one of them, which written Rabbie Burns style,  touched genius.
I am giving much thought to exactly what poetry is and I dont think there is any simple answer. I have two conclusions so far, though these might change. Poetry is far to restricted in its appeal and misses the masses. Poetry is however not egalitarian. How many truly awful poems (inlcuding some of mine) have I seen written on the spur by reps of those same masses who think that if two lines rhyme then it must be poetry regardless of content and style.
At the moment I am mentally attacking the conceit of the avant garde poets who write but to impress their cocktail bedecked friends and other 'poets' (?), and also the semi-educated who serve up reams of doggerel in an admittedly less coneceited way yet look for appreciation and live and love by the line 'I write poetry'
I found the poem below ( 'a found poem' as THEY say), and it partially sums up what a good poem should contain.....I think.....

The prize-winning poemby Fleur Adcock
It will be typed, of course, and not all in capitals: it will use upper and lower case
in the normal way; and where a space is usual it will have a space.
It will probably be on white paper, or possibly blue, but almost
certainly not pink.
It will not be decorated with ornamental scroll-work in coloured ink,
nor will a photograph of the poet be glued above his or her name,
and still less a snap of the poet’s children frolicking in a jolly game.
The poem will not be about feeling lonely and being fifteen
and unless the occasion of the competition is a royal jubilee
it will not be about the queen.
It will not be the first poem the author has written in his life
and will probably not be about the death of his daughter, son or wife
because although to write such elegies fulfils a therapeutic need
in large numbers they are deeply depressing for the judges to read.
The title will not be ‘Thoughts’ or ‘Life’ or ‘I Wonder Why’
or ‘The Bunny-rabbit’s Birthday Party’ or ‘In Days of Long Gone By’.
‘Tis and ‘twas, o’er and e’er, and such poetical contractions
will not be found
in the chosen poem.
Similarly cliche´s will not abound:
dawn will not herald another bright new day,
nor dew sparkle like
diamonds in a dell,
nor trees their arms upstretch.
Also the poet will be able to spell.
Large meaningless concepts will not be viewed with favour:
myriad is out;
infinity is becoming suspect;
 aeons and galaxies are in some doubt.
Archaisms and inversions will not occur;
nymphs will not their fate bemoan.
Apart from this
there will be no restrictions upon the style or tone.
What is required is simply the masterpiece we’d all write if we could.
There is only one prescription for it: it’s got to be good.