
Originally Posted by
Stef F
I've enjoyed these latest poems; thanks Steve, Freckle and Alf.
Something in them reminded me of my late grandmother, so with nothing much better to do I've written a poem about her:
Granny
My grandmother ran her own nursing home
Raised three daughters to standards these days unknown
She was as strict as she was kind
Bright and stubborn; she knew her own mind
My grandfather, a soldier, fond of the dawn
Taken by cancer, before I was born
He could not be saved, so there it ended,
A loss so deep that could never be mended
She’d come to visit, travelling by train
And when we were in Cyprus she’d take the plane
That’s how I remember her, when I was small
Chatting away about everything or nothing at all!
She’d paint landscapes in watercolour and oil,
Rocks and water and skies on the boil
One of these I treasure with pride
Aphrodite’s rocks, lapped by the tide
She lived alone for many years
With a small spaniel named Suzie who had big floppy ears;
Silky black and white, Suzie loved to be touched
She was spoilt just a little, but never too much
When the fairies took Granny, we didn’t notice the deceit
A nibble of chocolate, a sip of ribena, neat;
She had a sweet tooth, and was sometimes merry
We’d tease her and ask if she’d been on the sherry
She said she’d been to the moon, didn’t you know?
It really is a marvellous place you should go!
She’s travelled the world; to the most far flung places
Met the Pope too; lots of famous names and faces
Fascinating broadcasts by the BBC
Volcanoes, icebergs; the documentary
Holiday programmes, those long haul flights
Master Chef, such culinary delights
A mind full of golden memories unreal
That really wasn’t part of the deal
Does it matter? Did she realise?
What she thought was real; she’d seen through others eyes?
It left her confused, not knowing her daughters
Reduced to a child and lacking in orders
She asked for Thomas; her love that had died
And in the end,they were reconciled