A miscellany of news and views from a quirky, mostly off-beat, but occasionally mainstream, writer and lover of the arts, the natural world and everything else that is amazing.
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Poets for change -- The Cellar Bards
Here are the Cellar Bards and Friends taking part in the 100-Thousand Poets for Change Global event on Saturday, September 27, 2014 on The Quay at Cardigan.
Saturday, 27 September 2014
The Wall
Today I am one of thousands of poets around the world who are
taking part in 100-Thousand Poets for Change day. The poems I am reading are below.
I’ll be reading them in Cardigan, west Wales, between 4pm and
5pm in an event organised by our local live literature group, the Cellar Bards.
We’ll be reading short poems on the theme of ‘change’ and ‘peace’.
The town’s community bookshop, Leafed
Through, is also taking part. Everyone
who reads poems will write them on postcards, which are being laminated to hang
on lines in the bookshop.
This is
one of many events being staged simultaneously around the world as a
demonstration/celebration of poetry, art and music to promote social,
environmental, and political change.
We hear so much
bad news and this is a chance for people to be involved in something positive,
and to link with others in getting the message out there that people do care
about local and world issues.
Many poets around the world, several
living in war-torn countries, are taking part in the event and they need to
know that people are listening to the fact that daily life and poetry must go
on.
Hundreds
of cities representing over 100 countries signed up to the 100 TPC global
initiative.
Visit www.100TPC.org for more details about 100 Thousand Poets for Change.
I chose one symbol to focus on for my poems for the day. When I was younger we had
the Berlin Wall, which symbolised the Cold War. Now we have the great wall that
cuts through the Palestinian lands and for me symbolises the tragedy of the
Middle East and the terrible divisions of today’s world.
At 25 feet it’s twice as high as
the Berlin Wall and it is 800 km long. It’s made of concrete and razor wire and
it’s not straight, oh no, it weaves around to do the most possible damage.
Sometimes it encircles villages, sometimes cuts right through them.
makes borders 25 feet high,
it separates, isolates,
divides families, splits communities,
wrecks water supplies,
surrounds villages to make prisons;
it’s a blueprint for division
it constructs apartheid -
and it kills the view from both sides.
it separates, isolates,
divides families, splits communities,
wrecks water supplies,
surrounds villages to make prisons;
it’s a blueprint for division
it constructs apartheid -
and it kills the view from both sides.
Children cry out for
the power of peace as
conflict tears the world
the power of peace as
conflict tears the world
*
flags over mountains,
bright colours for refugees
flying over plains
flags over mountains,
bright colours for refugees
flying over plains
Friday, 12 September 2014
Remote control
A flash of white flame
makes a negative image
and the scene
emerges on a screen;
a silent movie
in monotone infrared.
A man on the ground
has a leg missing,
he’s rolling around,
blood spurting out,
a fountain of heat pouring a pool.
Pieces of bodies scattered around a crater,
ghost white against black earth.
It took him a long time to die,
the man whose leg was blown off,
watched by his killer,
the man in the green flight suit
in a windowless metal booth,
who sees from 7,000 miles away.
The 21st century pilot,
Predator controller,
in charge of terminal guidance.

this airman who never flies
sits back in his padded chair
and blows smoke into unmoving air.
Cool, this box in the Nevada desert
smells of stale sweat and cigarettes;
a low hum of machinery
constant in the background,
while the chain of command
leads straight to his headset
from ground control station:
‘Countdown — three…two…one -
missile off the rail’.
And a Hellfire flares,
hits target in a distant desert;
he’ll never fail.

eats dinner in front of the TV,
plays with his son,
who stares at his Xbox and
kills enemies on the screen.
When his wife comes home,
the man is sleeping,
soundly aloof.
The boy kills another avatar.
No one talks, no one touches,
no one really sees.
Gadgets drone and hum,
this is the music of their lives.
This is
remote
control.
Labels:
drones,
poetry,
predator,
remote control
Location:
Cardigan, United Kingdom
Sunday, 7 September 2014
The witch of Satis
This poem was clearly inspired by Charles' Dickens wonderful creation of Miss Havisham. I am posting it now because the perfect illustration for it just appeared in my kitchen…
The witch of Satis
She dwells, yes, that is the word,
down there in the dust of her life,
not living, she dwells
in the wintry room of her making,
in her bloodless bitterness,
where no clock ticks,
time is still,
the air forever frozen,
her breath a cool vapour that has only
caressed the ash of life.
Her dress yellowed, its silk long dead,
her face a waxwork, eyes inward,
her body withered under the gown,
a shrunken spectre;
her movements small
and cold.
The young man sees
in the dusky candlelight
the detail of her,
but I feel it all,
from my haunt.
I live well in near darkness
and my silk is
finely tuned
to the smallest vibration
of my webs.
There is abundance still on her bride’s table,
a great cake,
it is for me,
my blotchy body and speckled legs
are all at home here.
Labels:
Charles Dickens,
Great Expectations,
Miss Havisham,
poetry,
spiders
Location:
Cardigan, Wales
Saturday, 30 August 2014
Dancing into the new term
So long since I posted here!
It seems like the summer holidays just took over and writing
fell off the top of the priority list. I have been writing some poetry through
August, but not as much as usual. (There's a little sample below).
There have been no open mic gatherings in my area through this
month and I do find that I write my poetry with the live reading of the work in
mind – it’s a real incentive when there are readings coming up.
So now that the season is starting again I am getting down
to write some new poems and I am so much looking forward to getting out there
to read some of the work.
I am still submitting my best
poetry to magazines and competitions, so I can’t post it here, as most
contributions to publishers and contests have to be unpublished.
There are several open mic events coming up
during September, so I have spent some time getting my reading file up to date.
To start off, I am looking forward to going
down to Laugharne this week where there is a regular live literature gathering
at Browns Hotel, the famous watering hole of Dylan Thomas.
Then there will be the Folk Night at
Rhosygilwen, Poems n Pints in Carmarthen and my home base, the Cellar Bards in
Cardigan. There are a few others in between too – west Wales really is a great
place for live literature events. More info on the Spoken Word Wales website
(link below).
Here’s a little piece that recalls the emotion on the day I
moved into my new home, over three years ago now …
Kitchen dance
feet on cold slate
in the heat of day,
she dances
in the space
she shaped with her joy
released to move
as she pleases
in her universe
she circles with the music
like she will never stop
opening her breath
to the whispers
the energy
the choice
the abundance
stepping,
turning
embracing
the core,
the
centre place
feeling
the space.
©2014JackieBiggs
LINKS
Cellar Bards on Facebook:
Poems and Pints on Facebook:
Labels:
dance,
live literature,
new term,
poetry
Location:
Cardigan, west Wales
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)