We who with songs beguile your pilgrimage / And swear that Beauty lives though lilies die, / We Poets of the proud old lineage / Who sing to find your hearts, we know not why ... (James Elroy Flecker)

23.7.24

A Crow Calls


There’s a crow calling

outside my front door

this clear, sunny day 

in mid-winter. I look out. 

Oh, he’s a big one, fat

as a lump of coal

but rounder.


He bursts from the tree

at speed, to follow the harsh 

cry I can only just hear

of another, further away.

His bright yellow beak 

shines against that mass 

of solid black.


Then they are gone, both.

Down the hill to other

houses? Or into the near

patch of forest? Different 

birds, more melodious, return 

to my yard; warble. 

(But I like crows.)




Let the poems ...


Let the poems come to you,

not you chase them.


Not how I’ve played it

all these years 

following prompts. 


If, would they be 

fewer but better? 


(But he didn’t say how

the poems might come.)







22.7.24

Between the Headstones


I looked so hard

to find my name

in the annals of Poetry,

in vain. ‘Let this be

a value judgment upon you,’

said an echoing voice 

which I privately labelled 

Doom.


And it would have been

so easy to turn away. 

But I remembered 

that when I began

I wanted only

writing instruments 

and a beating heart.

I feel to find if it still beats.