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Thread: Today's poet

  1. #12071
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    Re: Today's poet

    Alun Lewis who probably committed suicide in WW2 although the official line was he fell with a gun in his hand and accidentally shot himself in the head Either way we lost a fine poet

    Goodbye

    So we must say Goodbye, my darling,
    And go, as lovers go, for ever;
    Tonight remains, to pack and fix on labels
    And make an end of lying down together.
    I put a final shilling in the gas,
    And watch you slip your dress below your knees
    And lie so stlil I hear your rustling comb
    Modulate the autumn in the trees.
    And all the countless things I shall remember
    Lay mummy-cloths of silence round my head;
    I fill the carafe with a drink of water;
    You say 'We paid a guinea for this bed,'
    And then, 'We'll leave some gas, a little warmth
    For the next resident, and these dry flowers,'
    And turn your face away, afraid to speak
    The big word, that Eternity is ours.
    Your kisses close my eyes and yet you stare
    As though god struck a child with nameless fears;
    Perhaps the water glitters and discloses
    Time's chalice and its limpid useless tears.
    Everything we renounce except our selves;
    Selfishness is the last of all to go;
    Our sighs are exhalations of the earth,
    Our footprints leave a track across the snow.
    We made the universe to be our home,
    Our nostrils took the wind to be our breath,
    Our hearts are massive towers of delight,
    We stride across the seven seas of death.
    Yet when all's done you'll keep the emerald
    I placed upon your finger in the street;
    And I will keep the patches that you sewed
    On my old battledress tonight, my sweet.

    Alun Lewis

  2. #12072

    Re: Today's poet

    thats a great poem alf, its hard to imagine how young couples were able to tolerate the seperation and uncertainty that the 2WW (and other wars) brought, beautifully written

  3. #12073

    Re: Today's poet

    Blaydon baths ain't exactly the ionian sea
    but my waist sure did appreciate
    30 mins of dodging and diving
    through the fast lane
    and the mystery
    of the "*hit off a stick"
    big one....

    i am off to bed now with my book so night all (again!)

  4. #12074
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    Re: Today's poet

    Alf...what a sad but lovely poem...so much loss. Leonidas, glad you have made it back up again...I agree with Freckle, I think a few people out there have had a challenging time and I hope that everyone is on the up, and those that are down know that they aren't alone. I just can't seem to find the right poems this evening and my head is full of 'stuff'.

  5. #12075

    Re: Today's poet

    I just found out today that a really good friend of mine is going to tie the knot again after a run of very bad luck, so pleased for her ....now its her turn to sit in the hot unbroken circle.......

    Country Girl
    George Mackay Brown

    I make seven circles, my love
    For your good breaking.
    I make the gray circle of bread
    And the circle of ale
    And I drive the butter round in a golden ring
    And I dance when you fiddle
    And I turn my face with the turning sun till your
    feet come in from the field.
    My lamp throws a circle of light,
    Then you lie for an hour in the hot unbroken
    circle of my arms.
    Last edited by freckle; 17-08-2011 at 06:56 PM.

  6. #12076
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    Re: Today's poet

    Here is an interesting perspective on fox hunting over the ages from the foxes point of view (by Rudyard Kipling).


    Fox-hunting
    The fox meditates

    WHEN Samson set my brush afire
    To spoil the Timnite's barley,
    I made my point for Leicestershire
    And left Philistia early.
    Through Gath and Rankesborough Gorse I fled,
    And took the Coplow Road, sir !
    And was a gentleman in Red
    When all the Quorn wore woad, sir !

    When Rome lay massed on Hadrian's Wall,
    And nothing much was doing,
    Her bored Centurions heard my call
    0' nights when I went wooing.
    They raised a pack - they ran it well
    (For I was there to run 'em)
    From Aesica to Carter Fell,
    And down North Tyne to Hunnum.

    When William landed hot for blood,
    And Harold's hosts were smitten,
    I lay at earth in Battle Wood
    While Domesday Book was written.
    Whatever harm he did to man,
    I owe him pure affection;
    For in his righteous reign began
    The first of Game Protection.

    When Charles, my namesake, lost his mask,
    And Oliver dropped his'n,
    I found those Northern Squires a task,
    To keep 'em out of prison.
    In boots as big as milking-pails,
    With holsters on the pommel,
    They chevied me across the Dales
    Instead of fighting Cromwell.

    When thrifty Walpole took the helm,
    And hedging came in fashion,
    The March of Progress gave my realm
    Enclosure and Plantation.
    'Twas then, to soothe their discontent,
    I showed each pounded Master,
    However fast the Commons went,
    I went a little faster !

    When Pigg and Jorrocks held the stage
    And Steam had linked the Shires,
    I broke the staid Victorian age
    To posts, and rails, and wires.
    Then fifty mile was none too far
    To go by train to cover,
    Till some dam' sutler pupped a car,
    And decent sport was over!

    When men grew shy of hunting stag,
    For fear the Law might try 'em,
    The Car put up an average bag
    Of twenty dead per diem.
    Then every road was made a rink
    For Coroners to sit on;
    And so began, in skid and stink,
    The real blood-sport of Britain !

  7. #12077
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    Re: Today's poet

    I think that's called syncronicity! I saw a fox tonight and its the first one I've seen since living in the countryside. I often used to see them in the town. It made me wonder how safe it was because I expect the local landowners/farmers will have a pretty rigorous fox extermination scheme in place around here...I never feared for them in Suburbia. This one was a slinky wee thing too, not like the bruisers in the cities.

  8. #12078
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    Re: Today's poet

    Silence

    There is a silence where hath been no sound,
    There is a silence where no sound may be,
    In the cold grave—under the deep, deep sea,
    Or in wide desert where no life is found,
    Which hath been mute, and still must sleep profound;
    No voice is hush’d—no life treads silently,
    But clouds and cloudy shadows wander free,
    That never spoke, over the idle ground:
    But in green ruins, in the desolate walls
    Of antique palaces, where Man hath been,
    Though the dun fox or wild hyæna calls,
    And owls, that flit continually between,
    Shriek to the echo, and the low winds moan—
    There the true Silence is, self-conscious and alone.

    Thomas Hood

  9. #12079
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Hes View Post
    I think that's called syncronicity! I saw a fox tonight and its the first one I've seen since living in the countryside. I often used to see them in the town. It made me wonder how safe it was because I expect the local landowners/farmers will have a pretty rigorous fox extermination scheme in place around here...I never feared for them in Suburbia. This one was a slinky wee thing too, not like the bruisers in the cities.
    We get a lot of foxes where I live as its next to the fields and I always worry the cat will get eaten by them but for some reason they don't seem to attack cats ?

    City Fox, Country Fox


    The city fox envies his soft, rural kin:
    They don’t have to watch out for lorries and cars.
    The sleek village vixen just lazes away
    In wide-open fields, underneath sparkling stars.

    The city fox has to go out in the light
    When rustical Reynard sleeps safe in his bed.
    He only pops out in the midst of the night
    To pilfer some poultry from his chickenshed.

    The city fox struggles to keep himself fed;
    A diet of leftovers doesn’t go far.
    Whilst eking a living is all he can do,
    Arcadian diets are like caviare.

    The city fox scratches in bins for his food
    But, out in the country, his cousin lives well
    On rabbit and pheasant and other fine game
    Whilst rough, tatty townie recoils from the smell.

    The city fox wears his dull coat sparse and thin;
    His privileged relative sports rich and red.
    He sleeps in a cosy, warm, luxury earth
    And not in a dingy, cramped, waterlogged bed.

    The city fox hangs his tail limply and sad;
    He carries an unbristled stub of a brush,
    Whilst proudly his brother wags, bouffant and brash,
    His tail, fully furnished with fur long and lush.

    The city fox seeks for our sympathy, but
    He thinks he is safer by living in town
    For out in the country, they shoot and they hunt
    And life can be dangerous, if you are brown.

    The city fox chooses to live where he does
    Away from the huntsmen so pretty in pink
    As, shouting and chasing, they gallop along
    With hounds in the vanguard who jostle and jink.

    The city fox laughs at his lazy, fat aunts
    Who, chased by the beagles, soon run out of breath
    And give up the ghost and surrender at last
    In terror, awaiting a violent death,

    But city MPs have abolished his fun
    By banishing hunting to history’s book
    And so his soft sisters are safe as can be
    While his life is hard; they have all the luck.


    C Richard Miles

  10. #12080
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by freckle View Post
    I just found out today that a really good friend of mine is going to tie the knot again after a run of very bad luck, so pleased for her ....now its her turn to sit in the hot unbroken circle.......

    Country Girl
    George Mackay Brown

    I make seven circles, my love
    For your good breaking.
    I make the gray circle of bread
    And the circle of ale
    And I drive the butter round in a golden ring
    And I dance when you fiddle
    And I turn my face with the turning sun till your
    feet come in from the field.
    My lamp throws a circle of light,
    Then you lie for an hour in the hot unbroken
    circle of my arms
    .
    Thats a great line to finish a poem on freckle

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