The rain soaked dust is rising like a mist.

The rain soaked dust is rising like a mist
As in Port Meadow,Oxford riverside
The sun returns and takes it in a kiss.

The open spaces offer us real bliss
Where truly God  or holiness reside.
The rain soaked dust is rising like a mist

Yet when  we have the time do we resist;
Ignore the need to go where love abides?
The sun returns and offers us  a kiss.

The damage from the News give hearts a twist
Our dreams   may splinter, though we’re side by side
The rain soaked dust is rising like a mist

Do we know the life that we have missed
Taking in the media though we sigh?
The sun  shines brightly over  this abyss.

What is it  we do until we die
Breathing in the solitude awry?
The rain soaked dust is rising like a mist.
The sun returns and warms the iron fist

Poetry,body and soul

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Poetry is good for the soul, therapeutic for problems

“The class centers not on the literary side of poetry, but the emotional side.

“In a way it’s very good [not to criticize], but I’d like to bring in some criticism sometimes. I do it sometimes, but I like to emphasize the emotions in the positive aspects as much as possible.”

She believes that poetry is a perfect vehicle through which to express oneself, because it concentrates emotions.

“It has shorter lines than essays or stories and [therefore] compact thoughts and emotions that go into the poem,” she says. “Haiku especially, it’s like a puzzle. It helps to get the brain going.”

Poetry even can play a part in the prevention of Alzheimer’s, she suggests.

And for many poetry club members, this class has helped in healing, and keeping the brain and soul active and awake.”

The kettle and its love

 

I am a kettle made of stainless steel
I am a saint,  for tea  is brewed to heal
And , unlike kettles on an old  coal fire,
I am not dirty nor do I perspire.

My mirrored sides reflect you as you cook.
Look at me and read me like a book
I’m  full of love and hotter than a man
Oh, dear lady, love me while you can.

Superior mother,  yet inhuman  I;
Even electric kettles sometimes lie.
I shall never punish you, my dear
For perfect love like mine shall wield no fear.

All I ask is that you polish me.
For, in between your hands, I  yearn to be.

The old party dress

The moon is mauve like my old party dress
I wore it with  the shoes of purple pink
And silver like the tongues of  merchants blessed

I love you more and more,not less and less
I don’t know how or what you think
The moon is mauve like my old party dress

And yet I’m loth to boundaries transgress,
Even when we view each other’s  strenuous blinks
Is silver like the tongues of  angels  stressed?

I have  garments,radiant, diverse
From red and purple  to a  bluish pink.
The moon is mauve like my old tarty dress

In   my bed, I wear a  woollen vest
A man’s pyjamas and a mother’s wink.
My father sang so well ,I dreamed impressed

My pen is  running out of  golden ink
The queue in Ryman’s left a  quadrilateral blanked
The moon is mauve like my old tarty dress,
And silver like the tongues of  rakes bypassed

A humorous take on Brexit

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/brexit-british-jobs-david-davis-divorce-bill-spanish-pensioners-immigrants-a7934881.html

 

The success of the Brexit negotiations show that we’re finally getting our country back

Proper British jobs such as knight, chimney sweep, coming 26th in Eurovision and weeing in a foreign fountain will be reserved for BRITISH workers

Owl faced moon

Moonlight leaves a sheen like rain
upon my skin; the owl asks
what place I’m in? I am the place:
it’s here, within, oh owl-faced moon.

Jack Brae Curtingstall

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_W._Sexton

Mahmoud Darwish,poet of peace

https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2009/aug/07/mahmoud-darwish-poetry-palestine

Extract

For the last 12 years of his life, Mahmoud Darwish was my neighbour. He was a shy, private man who was rarely ever seen in public events unless he was reading his poetry. I served with him on the board of the literary magazine, Karmil, which he edited. Except for these work meetings, I rarely saw Darwish. Sometimes I would come across him taking a walk around the hills of Ramallah; sometimes at the house of mutual friends, but never in public places, restaurants or cafes.

The opportunity to find out more about my neighbour came when we were both under curfew during the invasion of Ramallah by the Israeli army in 2002. It was then that I got a call from the aptly named Bomb magazine in the US to conduct an interview with Darwish. I readily accepted hoping that through an intimate one-to-one discussion I would get to know my famous neighbour better.

We just had a few hours in the morning when the Israeli army lifted the curfew to allow people to shop. I asked Mahmoud to come to my house for the interview and he agreed. As always, he was immaculately dressed but, like all of us, he looked tense and concerned that we finish on time so that he could make it back to his house. We ended up spending three hours together, where I was able to find out how he was managing to write under these conditions.

He described to me his poem State of Siege, which he wrote in response to the Israeli invasion. It was “a poet’s journal that deals with resisting the occupation through searching for beauty in poetics and beauty in nature. It was a way of resisting military violence through poetry. The victory of the permanent, the everlasting, the eternal, over the siege and the violence.” Hearing him speak, I realised how fortunate I was to have found a kindred soul who was struggling with the same difficult issues I was having in my attempts to write about the invasion.

He was adamant that Palestinians “cannot be defined by our relationship, positive or negative, to Israel. We have our own identity.” In his diaries, A River Dies of Thirst, just out from Saqi, under the entry entitled “If We Want” Darwish writes: “We will become a people when a writer can look up at the stars without saying, ‘Our country is loftier and more beautiful.'”

Poet John Ashbery dies

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http://forward.com/culture/books/382028/how-poets-and-novelists-are-mourning-john-ashbery/?attribution=articles-article-listing-17-headline

Quote:

“John Ashbery was among the very greatest poets of the postwar era, one of the most imaginative and accurate chroniclers of what he called “the experience of experience.”

======

David Lehman, a poet and the editor of The Best American Poetry series, included in his remembrance for The American Scholar a mention of sharing an office with Ashbery in the 1970s. He noted that “It was also fun to observe as things JA said in interviews entered the general discourse. For example, ‘Often people don’t listen to you when you speak to them. It’s only when you talk to yourself that they prick up their ears.’ And: ‘I am aware of the pejorative associations of the word ‘escapist,’ but I insist that we need all the escapism we can get and even that isn’t going to be enough.’”

Reflecting on him in the Times, poet Rae Armantrout reflected on how Ashbery’s down-to-earth humor manifested within his poems. “He is one poet who can somehow be simultaneously elegiac and playful, even goofy,” she wrote. “If you could find the impossible space where Franz Kafka overlapped with the Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein, John would be sitting there happily, grinning like the Cheshire cat.”

In a piece for The New Yorker, poet and novelist Ben Lerner imagined Ashbery inserting some jokes into his tribute in an august periodical, like Tom Sawyer spying on his pomp and ceremony of his own funeral. “I’m dizzied by my luck at having overlapped with John Ashbery, one of the good things about being born when I was,” Lerner wrote.

Then he channeled Ashbery in paranthetical: “(here he would probably make a joke: ‘Television is pretty good, too,’ or ‘Antibiotics can come in handy’).”

Read more: http://forward.com/culture/books/382028/how-poets-and-novelists-are-mourning-john-ashbery/

Depression may be the result of inflammation

Devon seagull

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2017/09/08/depression-physical-illness-could-treated-anti-inflammatory/

 

“Current treatment is largely centred around restoring mood-boosting chemicals in the brain, such as serotonin, but experts now think an overactive immune system triggers inflammation throughout the entire body, sparking feelings of hopelessness, unhappiness and fatigue. “

We heard the seals pass,stuttering the blues

eastern_wash 3_coastline

Whereas the eastern hinterlands of Norfolk, north of King’s Lynn, do have relief features in the form of cliffs at Hunstanton which reappear near Wolferton village within Sandringham Estate. There is a gentle undulating landscape that is predominately farmland but of a more intimate scale than the open landscape around the corner of The Wash towards the west. Trees and woodlands feature much more greatly here, and the church spires are lost much more easily amongst the hills and woods. In part, this area has been nationally designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, which is a landscape based designation which includes placing statutory duties on relevant bodies to ensure it maintains its character and beauty. Remnant sea banks do not tell the story of the land here, but Norman Keeps make a hint towards past landscapes.

Uplands of the eastern Wash coastal line that feature inland further south within the entity.
© Borough Council of King’s Lynn & West Norfolk

By the Wash, the estuary of the Ouse
And three more rivers adding to the swell
We saw the seals pass murmuring the Blues

Nature opens up if we read clues;
The giant sky, the sound  of a church bell;
By the Wash, the estuary of the Ouse.

A dangerous place, where currents catch the loose,
Old Hunstanton, white sands,cliffs with frills.
We saw the seals pass, shimmying the Blues.

Only painters need to find new excuse
For watercolour blends into the cells
By the Wash, the estuary, the  Great Ouse.

My eye with radiant colour was imbued
Then it passed more deeply to my soul.
We saw the seals pass murmuring the Blues.

Nature can bring calmness,make us whole
And in its fierceness also make  us bold.
By the Wash, the estuary of the Ouse
We  heard the seals pass, stuttering the Blues

 

 

 

Cry clean only

Devon Goat dung trail 2

I have had a ludicrous day wondering if some wool trousers I bought could be washed despite the label saying not to.Then I learned you should only wear them 3 times before cleaning.I guess giving them away is the easy option.
Or I can

1.Put them on a hanger outside if  there’s a breeze as it will kill bacteria.
2 Steam them to kill germs
3 Buy a tumble dryer and a home cry clean kit
4.Buy some Febreze  to take away an odour
5.Steam them with a hot iron.
6.Brush them with  a hard clothes brush
7.Use them to send Morse code signals and hope the movement shakes   off the smell
8.Accept that we are too clean nowadays.
9.Never mix with other people
10.Give them to the Oxfam shop
11 Wear them as a shoulder wrap
12 Tie them round my head in winter
13.Cut them up and make a bed cover.
14.Let the cat wear them
15 Sell on E bay

OR

Wear six pairs of underpants underneath to be sure no evil female odour  gets on them

Could you love an insect?

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We were told when Robert the Bruce was in prison he survived by studying a spider creating its webs,It consoled him.So the spider helped him but was hardly a pet.First it was totally independent and more important,insects don’t have faces.They have eyes but no expression.And they are too small.A cat may feel like a baby…but a fly will not

Which makes me think we love  animals and even birds because we can detect a personality or imagine we do…….we can ascribe feelings and love to them.Perhaps we make them into mini human beings?

As insects are so different and smaller generally,as they are cold blooded,they seem too different to become pets.I have been known to address a spider as I help it out of the bath but I can’t distinguish that one from another.With cats,even when they are the same color,we can recognise their eyes,And they are very aware of our feelings…and wish to comfort.

But with insects we can get benefit by see how different they are and studying their lives .Ants are very kind to each other and carry a damaged ant back to the nest,for examplle.So they can provide food for thought..

It’s like sweet silent music to my ear

The silence seems more friendly than  before
It’s like a melody  felt in my ear
This love has taken from me, my own fear
When silence was an omen with dark door
The flowers and all of nature, I adore
Gone are paranoia and its seers.
The silence seems more friendly than  before
It’s like sweet silent music to my ear
I am drawn to love you more and more.
Hypnotic  like the sun on Windermere
A misty air arising as we peer
The silence is more friendly than  before

Such perfume like a flowery, prickly bride

I meant to put the cyclamen outside
Their scent’s  so good, I may keep them near me
We walked through yellow gorse near the North Sea
Such perfume like a flowery, prickly bride
Flowers and their  small hearts can never lie
Nor can maples and the holly trees
I meant to put the cyclamen outside
Their scent’s  so good, I may keep them near me
I must be sure I don’t let them get dry
I   promise I will  listen to their plea
No longer can plants stand on our TV
I meant to put the cyclamen outside

 

Lonely blue

I bought more cyclamen and recalled you
Wandering through wildflowers  by my side
I don’t know where to put them , they might die
Then I would feel so sad and lonely blue
All we read of pain and love is true.
Yet we let our hearts stay open wide
I bought some cyclamen and recalled you
Wandering through wildflowers  by my side
I have loved not widely but a few
I have touched on bliss  and when it flies
I have touched the grief that truly  lies
I bought  cyclamen and recalled you

 

 

Grieving for online friends

Devon Veracity 4
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/22/losing-online-friends-same-as-real-life-relationships

 

“When we get close to people online, we run the same risk as getting close to people in the real world: that we will love them and then lose them. And yet, just like in the real world, we reach out anyway, because that’s the kind of creatures we are: ones who crave emotional connection, be it across cyberspace or right across the table.”

How to look Bringlish

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When you go to a friend’s for supper,  never take a bottle of water or wine.Never turn water into wine and never get  shrunk even if he is a psychoanalyst

Wash your clothes  but don’t iron them
Go out in only a T shirt and jeans at night in winter.
Go to A and E as much as you can except when you have acute coronary syndrome.
Old grey /beige anoraks look good on most “English” people
Never wear a red hat.They might think you are Father Christmas
Wear skirts that show your thighs off or leggings that show everything off.Saves men buying soft porn.But do not charge.
Do wear crop tops and low rise jeans especially in winter.
Jeans with rips are perfect for old ladies.Rip them yourself.
[Teach Yourself How to Rend your Garments £4.99 e book’]
Wear thick padded down coats in the summer.
Never wear a summer dress unless you are a man
Never wear petticoats and other lingerie even if you are a man
Wear a T shirt saying: Anti-Semitic, moi? while touring Oxford looking for pubs
Wear a T shirt saying: Belgians, go back to Congo.?Columbus, go to Spain now.
Wear a T shirt saying: French Leave now/Romans left already
Wear a T shirt saying: No sprechen Deutsch/Believe me.Nein.Ten,When?
Wear a T shirt saying: I feel Rubbish/I  feel your pane/I just feel you.
Wear a T shirt that says :I Luv money/I have an oyster card/I  have no bike to get on.
Wear a T shirt saying: I want leave to commit crime/I want Remain to  leave./I want leave to Remain.
Wear a T shirt that says: Educated in Burton, can’t spell/Educated in  Gland./Got degree in rhyme.
Wear a T shirt saying: Och aye, President Rump!
Make sure your hair is exposed— both head and pubic.
I don’t understand either but they keep saying, where are you from?
I say,here. But somehow they don’t believe me.Yet.

Did Jesus keep a diary?

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Why did Jesus walk on water?
They had no roads!

Why did Jesus have followers?
Because he had a blog in mind

Why did God  make us?
That’s what we all wonder

Why did Jesus love us?
Because he had not met us!

Did Jesus keep a diary?
Maybe the Red Sea Scrolls.

Did Moses like law and order?
Only on tablets.

Why I write by Reginald Shepherd

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https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/why-i-write

“What we take out of life is the luminous moment, which can be a bare branch against a morning sky so overcast it’s in white face, seen through a window that warps the view because the glass has begun to melt with age. Or it can be the face of a beautiful man seen in passing on a crowded street, because beauty is always passing, and you see it but it doesn’t see you. It’s the promise that beauty is possible and the threat that it’s only momentary: if someone doesn’t write it down it’s gone. The moment vanishes without a trace and then the person who experiences that moment vanishes and then there’s nothing. Except perhaps the poem, which can’t change anything. As Auden wrote, poetry makes nothing happen, which also implies the possibility of making “nothing” an event rather than a mere vacancy. Poetry rescues nothing and no one, but it embodies that helpless, necessary will to rescue, which is a kind of love, my love for the world and the things and people in the world.

In a graduate contemporary poetry class I took some twenty years ago, a fellow student complained that a poem we were reading was “Just trying to immortalize this scene.” I found it an odd objection, since I thought that’s what poems were supposed to do. One is deluded if one believes that one can actually preserve the world in words, but one is just playing games if one doesn’t try.

The world cannot be saved, in any of the several senses of the word. To save the world would be to stop it, to fix it in place and time, to drain it of what makes it world: motion, flux, action. As Yeats wrote in “Easter 1916,” “Minute by minute they change;/ …. The stone’s in the midst of all.” Poet and critic Allen Grossman is not the first to observe that poetry is a deathly activity, removing things from the obliterating stream of meaningless event that is also the embodied vitality of the world and of time’s action in and upon the world, which creates and destroys in the same motion. The stream of time is both life and that which wears life down to nothing. “Poetry is the perpetual evidence, the sadly perpetual evidence, of the incompleteness of the motive which gives rise to it” (Grossman 71).””

Humour for pain relief

Albatros_DAP_Intaglio [1024x768]
Scientists have found humor helps arthritis, instead of prescribing ibuprofen the doctor will tickle you with a feather duster.You’ll have to strip of course and if the nurse cam in it would look strange to have them doctor running around the room saying,”You need another tickle”
So he’ll give you a pack of cards each of which says:
This card entitles the carrier to one tickle today,two tickles tomorrow.Four tickles the day after, and so on.
If the number of tickles doubles each day,how many tickles will you have been entitled to in a week?
In a month?
On the last day of the year would the number of tickles you were prescribed be more than the number of seconds in the day?
You’d better tick off the doctor for not understanding the growth rate.Still if it gives you or her/him a laugh……..your pain will diminish.
Bring back the tickle,I say.It never did me any harm,though I say it myself.
If that fails to heal you,you could ask for Capital Punishment…. you’ll have to move to London for that.

How to transition into Autumn?

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Lord,it seems until recently we were able to move from summer clothes to winter ones without a thought.But now there are article in Newspapers advising us ho to manage it.It’s a sad moment when we have to give up our lovely light summer things into heavy dark winter ones
In general we seem to be offered a good deal of advice which might be insulting as it implies we are very dim

Well,I can offer you a few thought for women

1.Wear some lightweight boots with your summer dress but only if you already have some. or wear  tights
2.Wear more layers of underwear  like petticoats.Especially if you are thin.Like 2 camisoles, 3 pairs of pants and 2 waist slips.It may start a new trend as pyjamas are already worn in Tescos!
3 Put a lightweight coat on.Even indoors!It may be colder inside than out.
4.Wear summer trousers with wool socks and proper shoes.And a jumper.Wool socks are amazing
5 Do you have that wonderful thing,a trench coat with a removable lining? If not  just wear a long thin cardigan under a cotton trench.
Alternatively, get your warm clothes out because it will save you putting on the heating.And trying out some new combinations amuses some of us

 

s. On the last train,Warsaw to Moscow, [ change Niegoreloje.]

Elena,a baby wrapped in woollen clothes.
On the last train,Warsaw to Moscow,
[ change Niegoreloje.]
1939.Father,mother,brother
You passed through the Arctic Wastes of life.
Still as if travelling on a train
To an impossibly far destination.
As you left the German Army crashed into Poland
Lost,your aunts
Your cousins.
Your culture.
How does God select the damned?
You had your own baby,here in England,
Not lost like all those others.
Your father died by his own hand,
The hand of history;
The fingers twitching,
Not sure where to point.
Then settling into frozen grief
A sculpture only your mother saw.
You saw too,Elena.
You always saw,though you can’t remember;
The long journey,your mother’s breast,
Your father’s silence.
Only the dead know that silence.
Only the dead weep
With the rocks and stones .
And the ice in each eye
Fell like snow down your cheeks
As you held your own infant.
Warsaw to Moscow,
Moscow to Jerusalem.
Always journeying
Looking for what they can never find:
The home they left behind
The presence of the dead
Lying in gaunt heaps
Like rubbish
Your aunts, Elena.
Your cousins.
You never knew them.
But there’s a hole in your mind
Through which the Polish wind forever blows

Gently dancing in the sun

Gently dancing in the sun
Wildflowers grow;
they bloom,
are gone.

With no thoughts,they have no cares;
Yet their lives are gentle prayers.
May I walk in such a way
That I'm  receptive to this day.

So I see with widening view,
And joy and sorrows embrace too.
Then my time will come like yours...
Of us nothing shall endure.
As to the earth our bodies go,
All are one;it shall be so

Variant regina

I lay in a  sweet bed of flowers ,why?
I had to use a spray to help my heart
There was no wall or seat to use nearby

I have a kind of migraine,not my eye;
The artery  constricts and blood can’t dart
I lay in a  sweet bed of flowers ,was it dry?

Yes,  it seems the blood could not pass by
Although it is informed and has a chart
There was no wall or seat to use nearby

It started on the bus and I went grey
The pain  desired a knife to get real sharp
I lay in a  sweet bed of flowers ,would I die?

I  reflect and wonder if I’ll cross the bay
Where I long to sing with a Jew’s harp
There would be  lots of seats for all nearby

Jewish music  is a fearsome art
Yet Jonah’s whale  sings gently to the carp
I lay in a   neat bed of flowers ,aye.
There was no wall or seat to use nearby

 

 

 

Devon: Verity – Border Morris – Goats, Haiku

Do look and listen

web author Anthony Fisher's avatarPoetry Images Music

We recently rented a cottage for along weekend with old friends.  Valerie and Becky have known each other for nearly 70 years!   It was in Watermouth Cove, Devon  and, although the cottage was a bit seedy, it was a lovely place to be.

We missed seeing the cove at full tide, we were often out and the 13 hour cycle was out of sync with us.

The top end was an untidy jumble of a boat yard, they  always seem to be like this like this.  One evening I watched a huge mobile crane creep from the hard across the beach to the work shop where it lifted a shiny engine destined, I suppose, for one of the yachts being worked on.

I sat on a bench and chatted with someone who told me that there are pockets of Cornish-like language in Devon.  We were both interested in…

View original post 1,060 more words

The road was flatter on the other side.

Why did Jesus feed the five thousand?

To prevent  them eating  his celery and  tomatoes

Why did Jesus like fishing?

He often caught a compliment.

Why did he cross the road?

The road was flatter on the other side.

Was Jesus an  Athlete?

No,he was a  Jew.

Was he not  Mormon?

Called Norman! [Cohen]

Was Jesus very strong?

About the same as  best whiskey.

Why do Catholics eat his body?

Because  they hate  making breakfast.

Does God care if we don’t  go to Church?

What’s a Church?

Why does God help those who help themselves?

Because many hands make light work

So God has hands?

In a very meaningful sense.

Why did Jesus ride on a donkey into Jerusalem?

He just missed the bus and they only ran twice an hour