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Words

Same Place, Somewhere Else

Glittering, shimmering, silver vibrations

Run through the field of stones
Like hot, tiny tiles long washed from the roof

of a make believe cottage, the flat, grey discs

Kept always in motion but known to the  child

Who played on this shoreline a lifetime ago

Grey while cliffs bring shade, hazing over head

Dripping, trickling, surging and sometimes pounding,

A fusion of water sounds in my ears

Right here and over jaggy rocks beyond
Changed but familiar, with no human trace

or clue as to when. I’m back on the beach

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Words

Canal to River

Bollards of cast iron help us understand

the plans of the top hatted ambition

which commissioned their casting

These rusting canal side  corrugations
tell us something different,

about a later generation of trade.

I see another story in the asbestos roofs
and rotting timber of more recent trading structures:

old brick, new brick, cladding,

Materials which speak of their decade.

These icons of canal economy show decay

is not linked to age. Flat. Almost in two dimensions,

the slow movement of past barges is almost as clear

in the mind as the vessels of today.

Across two fields that divide the waters,

I’m bathing in bouncing reflections of sunset.

The huge sky compresses the rippled black currant
into the green and brown of a littoral pathway.

Shadow fingers flit across cattle pasture

and the warmth of the sun is overwhelmed

by biting, noisy north wind
bringing both chill and the sound of a train on an unseen track.

Charcoal half sky cohabits with the clear blue of an alpine postcard

Through the same long winter clumps I tread

as walkers in tweed who followed the river’s winding,

and Saxons and Romans and the striders of  before.

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Words

Above Brimscombe Corner

Now wild and whistling through the green and brown of winter

But not wilderness

Layers of footsteps trod down over years

To work, to market, to church, to dance, to drink, to meet

Walking on reshaped land, thrown up in the delve for stone:

the mill owners house

Then walkers, ramblers, hikers enjoy the sweep and swoop of the hills

Watching  mills,  canal,  trains,  road and  river below

And  houses creeping up the slopes

Not wilderness, more the rich  strata of human trace

But feeling  wild now

Categories
Words

After the Fall

We loved the beauty of autumn leaves

holding on and falling.

You held on, vibrant in your autumn,

inspiring, in that calm before the fall,

until a sudden drop.

We crunched through leaves, but now your crunch has ceased,

wrinkled, dry and now empty of life.

Once you strode this path with zest, knew the way.

These same brown copper trees watched you walk,

stout booted, a red rucsac rambling guide,

long before me.

A ray of sun sneaks through beech branches.

‘Late leaf fall this year’, but no more chatting.

Fresh buds promise me new growth, next spring

but not for us. Now I know we’ve walked

our last crunching way

along this bronze ribbon,

snaking through the woods