A migrant contemplates the rising ocean

Wing-splayed, I am that dirt white moth

at rest on a redbrick wall.

My time is short

                           but unrestrained:

all your well-mannered shrubbery

has been consumed.

                                I must fly on      or die

before I reach the coast.

There, in newly engineered revetments,

concrete is stacking up:

the work of years, shielded by hoardings.

Sea defence. Its PR low-down tells me

we won’t be overwhelmed

                              at least in my lifespan.

                 

viii. 2025

 

 many thanks to Casey Jarrin for the moth

We have started to crack open the door

as if it were a safe.

From our hiding place in a tiny slice of dark matter,

we must now step through.

 

You are one of thousands

smashing particles, scouring the standard model

for some due cause

                                 of its collision debris.

But the clash of geometry and pure chance discloses

no obvious motive        yet.

 

And I am camouflage,

have passed every experimental test you’ve set

so far.     

           Beyond the AI mirror

where ripples of quantum light annihilate,

my deeper structures pulse.

 

It is too early to party –

that’s the second thing you should know.

We could still detonate the landmines

there        beneath our skin.

 

 viii. 2025

Activities of daily living

 

Back from the refill shop, weighed down

with staples, I pour loose flour into Kilner jars

watchful not to spill the meanest scruple.

But I’ve misjudged capacity,

bought more than there is storage for.

The funnel overruns: I ask myself

(were it allowed) how many people could

our surplus feed. And how long for?

 

Here is our laundry, soaked and rinsed and wrung

by hand, or pulled from drum to basket in wet lumps:

the mundane that makes us human,

going out and coming in like a tide.

We do not dress in salt-damp clothes.

My town has fuel enough – its water pumped

and clean. There’s soap to buy.

No dust of demolition in the wind.

 

Replanting our backyard in terracotta

is a long-term proposition, a luxury.

To recover what has been starved,

cut down, polluted and uprooted

needs more than water and new soil.

I gaze at my earth-dirty hands,

believe in century-old harvests, and

grieve at the absence of olive branches.

 

vii. 2025

Culture Matters

Poetry Wivenhoe 

BIRDMAN


Attic-high, a silhouette at a window, sits

spine folded. It’s you at your desk with lamp pulled low.

 

Look, a sixpence moon climbs through the cloudscape.

 

Don’t be distracted. Lay them out, Birdman –

they are your escape, your scripture.

This, your small collection of songbird wings

 

that beat no more. Predation, storm and sickness –

each tells its tale. You read their formulae.

Note how primaries may be emarginated

 

or sometimes notched. Through softness of coverts

feel a ghost-tug of wind. Every thread-fine barb

stroked in place, locked as a blade.

 

In your gnarled hands you turn them, like apologies

unspoken. Hum a refrain that has no words, but

 

begins with a wren, that thimble

of air-held flight no bigger than curled breath.

Chestnut and lightest of all.

 

Lands as goldfinch do, on thistle.

The mid-flight flicker of tarnished yellow

a bugle call of sunlight.

 

Ends with mimicry of starlings.

Pitch brown, buff-edged. No longer green sheen glossy,

their spangled winter gone.

 

These your feathered treasures, Birdman, cannot reply.

Unheard in your eyrie, their silence nests.

 

vii. 2025

Like an ocean freighter turning ...

today fades slowly, eases into night.

It carries a ballast of fallen petals,

has no pilot but the weight of hours.

 

About this pivot point we have lingered

outdoors. Tracing – for as long as we can –

the sun’s arc across a gasping planet.

 

Woken by an insistence of wrens, we saw

daylight moon rising over chimney pots.

 

We have freed a frantic butterfly trapped

by picture windows, watched foxgloves cast off

their white and purple vestment, seen cheerful

hollyhocks burst out like splashes of paint.

 

We have watered the persistence of poppies.

 

The year’s high noon unfolds in a flag-hung

horizon. Once crossed, there is no going

back, although we know what’s coming next:

 

summer will harden, tumble – like bombshells

dropped on purpose – down the keel of July.

Quiet as held breath, a bat skitters blackly

out of sight. Tongue-tied, we cannot name it.

  https://img.freepik.com/premium-photo/bat-flying-dusk-its-body-dissolving-into-shadows-night-embodying-twilight_181667-51837.jpg

 vi. 2025    

My Mausoleum

after a cartoon by Tom Gauld

is a teensy-weensy bookshop

no wider than its own front door.

Always has a queue of eager readers

entering one at a time.      They may feel

themselves too close for comfort.

But find my suggestions

are more than worth the proximity.

 

Or so I have been told.

 

It would be impolite to say

otherwise. For this is England,

where all is said     and done     and dusted.

So few shelves, so many tongues

to hold.      Yet each book chosen means

no-one goes empty-handed.

When my time comes, please seal me there

 

asleep in this uproar of language.

 


vi. 2025

The smell of stored apples

 

We knew full well it was a risk

to go back there. Break in.

No one would guess, you said. The old place

still vacant after all, porch light left on

as if to measure nightfall.

 

And knowing how to reach its bolt

the gate, hinge-loose, squeaked open.

A kind of mock welcome.

The grass gone soft where no feet passed,

trees grown crooked, or perhaps just older.

 

Inside the shed the air was sour

with smell of stored apples, long eaten.

Half-clenched, one soil-caked glove

lies on the workbench, a sleeping fist.

An unlaced pair of boots, gaping.

 

Already junk mail curls in the hall,

like unburnt leaves at a bonfire’s edge.

Cold tea stains cling to that cracked mug

left on the kitchen sill.

Dust collects. Our cast-off skin.

 

Briskly tucked in a mantelpiece

your last scrawled shopping list.

What it said, I didn’t ask – the silence was too full.

We touched nothing.

When dawn’s rain came, we swallowed

 

and were gone.

 

https://uploads1.wikiart.org/images/vincent-van-gogh/a-pair-of-shoes-1886(1).jpg

vi. 2025

 

painting: 'A Pair of Shoes' - Vincent van Gogh (1886)