A nimble princess is
   Sewing music on the expectant air
   precisely drawing a thread
   of harmony through holes in the audience …
   Every ear will leave embroidered
   in the end,
   A good mantle of unfamiliar flowers
   unfold a coherent
   grace
   over translated London
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   FAIR GAME
   (to Cat)
   Absorbing into my body a thing off a tree
   I am as much a predator as you who leave
   On the threshold of my advanced and intricate nest
   Another half-chewed bloody creature,
   Proof of your equality with me.
   In fact, superior -
   I cannot consume raw blood, bone, fur, feather;
   My meat is twice-killed with knife and fire,
   I share with your flying prey a taste and need
   For safety; the free gift; the sweet wet death-wish
   Bribing thieves to pass without violation
   And carry life for the tree.
   The vulnerable use me.
   You have the advantage, little beast, my solace.
   I am allowed to share your residence; I cannot choose
   To warm my lap with you, only accept
   Your own usage of me as a bed as I eat pears
   And remember, as we in fear have learned to remember,
   That your sire would have killed mine in the forest.
   Forward to Index
   PARADOX
   The indolent boy
   dances into a battle of string
   because he cannot help
   being graceful
   with his wrist and nice knee-strength
   he tames the wild length
   and make tortuous knots tight
   with fingers of flying light
   The solid conflict
   defines his mortality.
   The dance? -
   It is a bewitching thing
   Forward to Index
   A PILGRIMAGE
   Forgive me my long absence.
   I have come back now in search of my past.
   I came through the wide sweep of timeless fields
   (Too late for the mid-honey small of barley ripening,
   The swathes are raped, and marched in stooks up the fields)
   To my love-town, working from the perimeter
   Into its heart. That beat more fitful now.
   The coffee is good, rich with the germ of memory;
   Giovanni swings his hips at a younger breed,
   However; the feverish songs are not the same,
   And they have all gone - impossible loves of mine.
   Gone to their private universe that runs
   Parallel with my own; but where? The past wove
   And forked in strands, leaving my own thread
   To mingle with fresh loops of itinerant colour.
   Alone I return, occasional pilgrim.
   Back to the loved meeting and parting place
   To test its memory of me.
   The plain,
   The sheep-fields, river and houses still
   Swim under the belly of the sky;
   Still blows the mad Midland wind.
   I hear the sea rise among the cabbages,
   The wheat seething with sand (that image still),
   The dull turmoil of wind around my ears.
   If it could blow time from the rain-red earth
   And bring back the ice-cream harvest, I
   Would forfeit a dozen later loves. But this
   Grey gale has no pity for dreams;
   It drives me from my sad and empty Mecca,
   No song scaling the active walls of wind
   That never kept me, once, from what I loved.
   Forward to Index
   LINEAGE
   On some long gone but so real Saxon's account, I'm here.
   You're here, Mother; a mad Irishman
   Wanting his oats one day did it, and set the precedent
   Like the dry little active Jew that started Dad ...
   Dust of so many bricks in a new building!
   Sweet Life - the grass smelt of worms, the long air
   Was amove with sun, and our birds' begetters sang
   When the thoughtless stroke fell (in so bland a season!)
   With the sun in the right place;
   The generations
   That rushed then to the stairs of immortal life!
   Oh, what a wonder.
   And so the increscent fugue followed and followed
   From the first love-music ever made,
   The first chord struck on that cello-creature
   That sent vibrations down the centuries
   Into the gay duet that we have played!
   - My little dear:
   On some long gone but so real Saxon's account, you're here.
   Forward to Index
   FOR KIPPER
   Kitten grew; flowered slow like a hot cinder
   In smoke and flame. Summer and she were born together.
   Perfect now, she teaches me to read behind her
   Pure eyes the mysteries of her race. Weather
   Excites her! Steeple-chasing the wind, she and I
   Risk body and soul to delight the appraising sky.
   Forward to Index
   THE NIGHT HUNTRESS
   In the tangled churchyard
   At the dead of night
   Creeping through the shadows
   Flattened out of sight
   Prowling like a lioness
   Mistress of the wilderness
   Slinks a scrap of furriness
   Muscles tense and tight
   Glowing through the darkness
   Emerald eyes alight
   Doggedly the kitten
   Keeps her prey in sight
   On small silken stealthy paws
   Noiseless nearer still she draws
   Pounces swift with needle claws
   But her moth takes flight
   Bounding through the grasses
   Arcing over roots
   Valiantly the kitten
   Dashes in pursuit
   Tiny grey thing in the night
   Silent shred of ghost in flight
   Teasing lilts from left to right
   Nimble as a flute
   Through the darkling shadows
   Under star-pricked skies
   Homeward pads the huntress
   Triumph in her eyes
   Moth has fluttered far away
   Into hiding for the day
   She has found another prey
   Mouse! A peerless prize
   Forward to Index
   HEARTSEASE
   Though Hearts-ease lasts until the autumn only,
   When the leaves fall,
   Heart’s ease stays with us throughout the year
   So that sweet memories we may recall
   Of the little wild pansy
   Beloved of all.
   (Lowfell, 1950, age 7. My very first poem.)
   Forward to Index
   FOR AN AUTUMN WEDDING
   All is prepared.
   The slow white wedding-march of clouds,
   Sweeping the late leaves with skirts of rain,
   Have spread you a bright carpet in celebration.
   See, as you come,
   Golden slippers of sun run in the woodland,
   Lighting candles amidst the vaulting shade
   To make you a church of many aisles and altars.
   Listen together;
   The wind’s fine fingers fly on the organ.
   There are bells in the birds’ full throats for you,
   The leaves fall to their own gentle music.
   Their light kiss
   Upon your hair is of life and death; they speak
   With the ancient forest voice whose wisdom flows
   In root and seed, fed by the grey rain.
   Listen, and learn;
   How th 
					     					 			e brown earth, laced with a veil of leaves,
   Makes many weddings; death is a season’s sleep,
   Life a recurring dream from that rich bed.
   You are consumed
   Like leaves, gold in your every changing season,
   Dancing through lives and deaths, an immortal vein
   Of past selves ripening in the dark
   To nurture spring.
   Forward to Index
   GIRLS WITH GOLDEN HAIR
   Girls with golden hair were
   Meant to stand in the flowing corn
   Slender as the wheatstalks
   They stand among
   Between earth and cloud
   Pale in the lissom wind their long
   Hair showered with finely
   Flying seed
   To walk in the ripened year
   Bearing golden before them a swelling
   Legacy of secret
   Eyes that saw them
   Forward to Index
   SPRING AGAIN
   Having done Spring to death - forever, I thought,
   Amen - it poked a mauve nose out of the grass at me,
   Winked a gold eye, and Became.
   With little eddies of lust awhirl in the March wind
   Around the knees, frisking fresh girls out walking
   Tip-toe, tongues out they and the sky still
   For a taste, for a thrill of snow; cool,
   Baby, can’t kick the habit!
   Will stick my nose soon into a bud of wet lilac
   (We’ll gather lilacs in the Spring again
   When your incessant runabout breaks down
   Or one of your old, old ladies, waltzing gaily
   Out of a doorful of roses,
   Trips you with a giggle and sprouting stick)
   Oh soon we’ll roll in faggots of crushed lavender,
   And go without umbrellas in the rain,
   Again!
   Forward to Index
   SPRING-CLEAN
   Spring wind. Fever wind. Wowy round the roof-tops.
   Wind.
   Blood coming up for the new year, for next year’s prelude of memories.
   As flames shake out fresh with a sound of handkerchiefs
   And trees bud birds to race the arriving sky.
   Weep over the leavings of last year,
   We’re done with pigeon-pie.
   This year cry sea-gull, and keep a nipped finger till next March.
   The sun starts now, practising for summer.
   Surprised by the end of winter, detergent comes with free daffodils,
   Opulent ladies begin playing at charities
   As February waltzes out in the girls’ Excuse-me
   And March comes in late, looking sheepish, 
   With hocus-crocus of mad March babies and royal hair
   As Woolworth plies the primrose path to Mother’s day.
   Out in the blue air of Sundays, people whistle and wash-leather their cars
   With radios out on the pavement and soapy streams in the gutter
   Until ...
   Lo! More snow (everyone back inside:
   Shilling for the gas, homework over hot crumpets and butter)
   In March shivers, blowing like sand over the sea-slates
   Or winter shook the last crumbs out of his cold cloth
   For the visiting sun to peck at
   Come on, spring!
   Buck up, it’s nearly the silly season!
   The trees are all bark, the wind all sarcastic bite
   But the almond has pinkened ever since Valentine’s Day
   And it won’t be long before sun, wind and trees
   Make friends in a jolly rape of petals
   On weekend anniversaries
   Of so many,
   So enjoyably
   Lost virginities!
   But meantime it’s spring wind, chilly wind,
   Draught up the trouserlegs, scarves on rag-day
   Wind
   As the twigs chirrup with perhaps a little frost
   Teasing the sap under the tickle of lambing-time,
   And it’s a toss-up between
   Cold fingers, or resisting the pleasure
   Of smoking the kissing-season’s first fresh-air cigarette.
   Forward to Index
   THE BELOVED GARDENS)
   Amid the noise
   In millions, clangour of men
   Sweating for self-praise;
   In the misapprehension of iron, time-lapse, toil,
   Germ in the pantry and
   Universal hand;
   By greenless villa, lock and staring cell
   Earth’s plumage plucked,
   Muscle
   Treated and trussed,
   Fit flesh for biting;
   Amid new bulls without horn,
   Plant without sap or seed,
   Amid the un-flighted cranes
   Go they,
   The gardeners go
   Forth secretly to the beloved gardens.
   Among dog-daisies
   And wild rose,
   Treading over the long fought-for silence
   Of grass imperishable
   They give their good-days,
   They go forgotten ways,
   They bend, and disappear.
   They open the long-locked ear
   Of Time within;
   And all the ages gone when the sun shone
   Straight from eye to eye
   Subtly take possession of their mind.
   Bramble and woodbine,
   Spurge, owled oak, and willow
   Welcome homeward the slow dreamer, the old fellow.
   His one friend sits by him and sings.
   Mole, hole and hedgerow watch with a noonday eye
   For the unwanted things.
   Few come here to learn economy.
   He, root-bent, researching the earth,
   Tends to the only immortality.
   It will receive him;
   And shall give rebirth
   To dog-daisies,
   Bramble and woodbine,
   Spurge, owled oak, willow
   And wild rose,
   To moth, fireweed, nettle and nightingale
   Amid the noise.
   Forward to Index
   THE FIRST BULLFINCH
   Rose-breasted, bobbing bird on the pathway,
   Slate-blue back in the sun flashing steel,
   Picking and hopping,
   And stopping;
   White rump-splash bobbing,
   And robbing
   Small, hidden, crevice-grown weeds
   Of seeds - 
   Where have you been?
   Why before have I never seen
   Handfuls of sky-blown rose-flame,
   Twig-bending plumply
   In the sun-flecked mazes -
   A steel-winged,
   Pink-puffed
   Thistle-tuft
   Like you?
   Forward to Index
   DISASTER
   Here are the people waiting
   Against the flowing sea
   Down the banks of shingle
   The sun is circled with fog
   We swim in the idle tide
   The children fidget and argue
   They balance along the ropes
   The ropes that loosed the lifeboat
   Washed away in the mist
   To the lonely mooing at sea
   The people read their papers
   They sleep in the Sunday sun
   A ship is lost in limbo
   The fog is heavy with souls
   Here are the people waiting
   On the blond and shimmering shingle
   A little too cold to swim
   In the blue and tinsel sea
   The women are thinking of lunch
   And the boat has not come back
   Forward to Index
   CONCEPTION
   I shall, calm-eyed,
   Shake out my blankets in the sun
   And sheets out like flags
   Until bearing.
 
					     					 			   The many flowers
   Race to grow faster than my melon-
   Belly, round and ripe as a
   Pink cantaloupe.
   I shall
   Lily and Amaranth
   Plant among my hair and
   Golden feet.
   The thrush’s song
   Shall await my shout before
   Giving tongue to war
   Over the world’s edge.
   I shall give
   A new priest to the sea:
   Our kind is growing, who never
   Blaspheme her beauty.
   Our race,
   Gentle as wave or wind,
   Will help poor God to soothe
   The hot world.
   Forward to Index
   MAYTIME
   Maiden Kent in her first blush of blossom
   Led in the Maytime to an orchard bridal
   Uphill and downland black gorse put to the torch
   Takes the coin of the sun and scatters it
   In the path of wayfarers amid weddings
   Who weave among reed-beds bittern and weed
   To water-sheets
   In the deep woodland waits
   A reflected heaven
   All the trees breathing a blue gas
   Drift in a lake of altered consciousness
   And all the bells are birds
   Forward to Index
   OCTOBER 16th 1987
   The wind whines in the gratings. It is a mean cur
   Leaping and baying at the last of the trees.
   This night it pulls on a leash, still
   By some harsh hand held between towering seas
   And we pray again, as we prayed under a Scorpio Moon
   (Piteously, in vain) the tyrant fist
   Of air not follow its hound to scythe and flail
   In seven howling hours seven counties' forest.
   Felled trees flake into humus; rooftops wrenched
   Break into powder and shard, a thin seam
   Laid down, pointing the future's history.
   Will fear come up on the spade? Will their seers dream?
   Blood was not the storm's quarry but only our sleep,
   Only our sleep, Lord; an amazing Hand
   Held our houses safe from cedar and oak.
   Only a few died, leaving a shattered land