Sunday, 6 March 2022

All the world watches


One and a half million refugees,

so far

have said their farewells

to men who have to stay,

as women hold bewildered children

and grandmothers weep.

 

A man sees his wife and kids 

onto a crammed carriage,

his tears stream as

he watches them leave.

You can feel the connection

between them pulling, stretching.

He will fight for his country

and for them.

 

And the man in the Kremlin says this is not war.

 

Sirens sound across cities,

families trail to underground stations

camp on platforms

sleep in stationery trains

keep each other warm.

 

Blocks of flats

crumble like the twin towers

burn like Grenfell

and no-one can put out the fires.

After the bombings

there are bodies in the streets.

 

And the man in the Kremlin says this is not war.

 

Hospitals, nurseries, schools

pummelled from the air

cluster munitions smash a kindergarten

ballistic missiles wreck a health centre.

There’s no water, no food,

no power.

 

People race to a city centre

where 50 buses wait

to take them across borders

but the ceasefire is a lie

and they are shelled in the streets

where they gather

like prisoners in a ghetto.

 

And the man in the Kremlin says this is not war.

 

His military shell nuclear power stations,

cut off the internet

block mobile signals.

Yet the words get out ... people meet...

And thousands of demonstrators

are detained at anti-war protests

across Russia

as the sound of dissent

is stifled.

 

And the man in the Kremlin still says this is not a war.

 

 

Tuesday, 22 February 2022

Breakfast with Dudley, Eunice and Franklin

 

We had breakfast by candlelight.

The kitchen looked like a church at Christmas

thanks to Dudley, Eunice and Franklin,

but it wasn’t romantic.

It was cold

even though it seemed to be lit by warm fire.

 

I fill a kettle from a tap as I look out

of my double-glazed window,

light the gas hob, make coffee

(I note it’s from Colombia).

And somewhere in the world I know

there are people cutting down trees

to mine the earth for more gold and copper

to keep the pockets of the rich filled up.

 

Somewhere in the world

there are people who have no candles

and they don’t get breakfast every day,

people who suffer floods or drought

fires or hurricanes or famine

who live without running water

or proper shelter from ever stronger storms.

 

Swathes of forest are burning

animals can’t  find food

our plastic waste fills waterways and oceans

bees are dying,  icebergs melt

sea levels are rising, islands drowning.

Somewhere in the world

farmland is turning to desert.

 

And here, we turn on the gas

to make coffee before we light the open fire,

and burn more coal.

And thanks to storms Dudley, Eunice and Franklin

we wait with our candlelit breakfast,

for the electricity to come back on,

so we can run the oil-fired central heating,

recharge our phones and laptops

fire up the wi-fi and pretend

we are connected to the world.

Wednesday, 1 December 2021

Gateway

 A poem written on a recent holiday to the Llyn Peninsular, where we stayed in a cottage on top of the cliffs overlooking Porth Neigwl, also known as 'Hell's Mouth Bay'. A region so loved by R S Thomas. The photo is sunset behind Ynys Enlli.

Gateway

Something loosened

knots unravelled

a sluicegate gave way

 

as I watched the new moon sink

over the settled sea

of Hell’s Mouth bay.

 

A curlew call pierced the air

from another place

far across the silence

 

a linnets’ chorus scattered

sharp sparks of song all over

the stark hedges of top field....

 

This, followed close by 

the click of cogs settling       inside    me.

Light flickered as

 

crowds of starlings arrived on telegraph wires

and covered the field in spangled wings,

prattling marauders, picking from the ground,

 

their meals enriched

from the leavings of grazing sheep

and Charolais cattle who stare with gentle eyes.

 

In the dunes of Porth Neigwl

we watched a stonechat flit

among bramble briars

 

it’s flirty mate chanting

a call like turning metal cogs...

clickclick peep clickclick peep

 

and later, in the dusky dark of top field

I leant on the farm gate

and looked to the shadow of Ynys Enlli

 

where that slender mooncrescent of gold

slid into the sea

and something inside me

slipped

into place.



Tuesday, 14 September 2021

Reclaim the land

Apparently three million more people are making valuable use of their gardens to grow fruit and veg, thanks to lockdown. (Royal Horticultural Society figures).

Here's a poem I wrote early last year, a simple little poem that I hope says a lot. There's a link at the bottom to some easy planet-friendly tips for gardeners from the RHS.

Reclaim the land  

Grow things,

prepare compost, rich and deep

get your hands in the soil

feel the goodness there

breathe the warm scent of it.

Set seeds and take cuttings

nurture your earth

plant trees



make orchards of apples, plums and pears

raise fruit and veg for your table,

and for your neighbours,

grow things, just grow things,

grow.


This poem appears in this 40-page book of poems and pictures, 'In the Garden' which was produced this summer by a group of poets in south west Wales. Copies are available direct from me for £5 inc p&p.

Here are 10 simple planet friendly tips for gardeners from the RHS ... 

https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/gardening-for-the-environment/planet-friendly-gardening-tips