Sunday, 1 April 2018

The Diamond Litter of Stars.

In this tinsel world of botox faces,
perfect orthodontal smiles
and all those desperate attempts
to keep youthful looks

I’m thinking about
the headlong stampede of youth 
and the crumbling that comes with age

and I’m also thinking that for beauty
sunset’s red, orange and purple blaze 
equals sunrise’s swathe of pastel glow

and how, after the end of day,
is the velvet quilt of night
and the diamond litter of stars.

First published at One Sentence Poems.

The Merchant”s Pearl.


    

The Merchant’s Pearl.

Gentlemen, our last item is truly special.
I unveil magnificence. 
Note the perfect plumpness of the breasts,
the silken smoothness of the thighs,
the fineness of the skin,
the thickness of the hair,
the untarnished youth.
You have been blessed with money.
Your power has brought you rare privilege.
Many dream of such honour.
Now this can be yours to buy, to possess, to enjoy.
There are no obligations attached.
Keep it for as long as you like.
Do with it as you will.
I see your eyes feasting.
Let your imaginations feast too.
All will envy you, consider you blessed.
Now, gentlemen, who will start?
Who makes the first bid?

This satire was first published in The Ekphrastic Review.

Gifts.

Gifts.

I give to you these trifling things,
light from life, love and age,
diverse experiences distilled
and patterned upon the page.

Are they only wisps of breath?
Distillations of the chest?
Essence of love, joy, hope or pain
dripping forth before I rest?

Are they lighter than thistledown?
Little more than seeming?
Are they the heart’s desire to search
for beauty and for meaning?

Some build tall towers or bridges.
My desire is just to sing,
so take these gifts I offer.
Are they merely trifling things?

First published in April Verse Virtual. 

Searching for Gold.

Searching for Gold.

I dip my pen into the stream
to see what will unfold,
swirl and sluice upon the page
seeking for that glimpse of gold.

I have seen the shining glory
that some old miners found,
drawn from darkly rippling water
or gouged from littered ground.

Now I dip into the mystery
flowing by the riverside,
seeking in the moving stream
for where the gold resides

and eagerly bending to the task,
desire just this small part:
that the treasure which I seek sings
of truth, beauty and the heart.

First published in April Verse Virtual. 

Thanks.

Thanks

for this blue-sky, cloud-scudded, leaf-swaying day,
this glistening, sparkling, sun-filled day,
this dappled, shade-strewn, patterned day,
this magnolia-blooming, freesia-littered, plum-blossoming day,
this bud-swelling, bird-singing, spring-cool fresh day,
this day that turns its back on winter’s cold,
this day of growth, colour and warmth,
this day of birth and laughter and song,
this tender day, this day of beginnings,
this lung filling, mind uplifting, joyous day,
this day when the heart swells and hope, like sap, rises,
this day when the world seems bright and light-
yes, thanks for the glory of this day.

First published in Verse-Virtual, March 2018

How Long?

How Long?

They said they spoke for you,
those men of old.
They claimed that you spoke through them.
“Thus says the Lord,” they say,
“the High and Holy One”.
They had great visions:
justice and equity for the poor, 
swords beaten into ploughshares,
spears into pruning hooks,
the horror and waste of war finished,
everyone having their own vine and fig tree,
the lame leaping like the deer,
the blind receiving sight,
the desert blooming,
tears wiped away
and best of all, the prisoners, 
those appointed to death,
unshackled and set free.

Trouble is, every day 
I hear screams of children,
see mothers cradling starving babies,
watch the thick smoke of war 
blanketing the near horizon,
read of detestable men in high office,
villages covered by sludge slides,
the sea rising, glaciers melting,
species disappearing,
cities running out of water,
a huge tide of refugees
adrift and homeless,
on and on that old repeated story
of corruption, inequality and blood.

Those promises were ancient long ago.
Millennia have passed since their 
“Thus says the Lord”.
And what I want to now ask
are questions also asked long ago
by prophets and psalmists.

They cried out in their anguish and confusion
and I cry out the same.
How long, O Lord, how long?
Will you keep your promises?
Will this earth be restored?
When will you fill it with your glory?
When will the knowledge of you
fill the earth as the waters cover the sea?

First published in Verse-Virtual, March 2018

Let.

Let.

let me be an open ear,
slow to speak and quick to hear
each rustle, whisper, stifled cry,
joyous laugh or inward sigh

let me be an open hand,
a hand which in compassion touches,
a gentle hand to tenderly heal
time’s red welts and painful weals

and if this tongue must needs speak
let words truth and beauty seek,
such words as always combine
balm for soul and salve for mind.

First published in Verse-Virtual, March 2018