Welcome to my blog...whatever image springs to mind, be it a hippopotamus, Tigger, red-haired Highland cattle, or a simple kitchen table, 'Unless a Seed' is a four-legged creature. My hope is that having read a Book Review, a Poem, or a What is a Christian? or some random post in Everything Else, you will be kind enough to leave a comment or a short reply. And I hope you enjoy reading its contents
The Naming
Storms come. Finding the purpose.
Atlantic blasts unleashed
You unstuck my feet
Stood on a rock, but
It was no defence
I could have knelt, I suppose
But I did not, instead
Chin in the air, eyes closed
I shouted for you to come
Pitched over, drummed down,
I joined the snakes on the ground
Returned like a small child
To the lower places
But it was here in the dust
I heard of another storm
Brewing, boiling, roaring
I looked the other way
Who are you, wind-wild
And coming from the east?
Full of terrible kindness
Pulling up the fallen
I could name you,
Except you said ‘No, I am
Here to name you’
It’s time
Contentment Haiku 2: Early on the Water
Contentment Haiku 2…Bristol harbourside this morning before dawn, double-sculls on the dark water, small lights on bow and stern. Contented rhythm of oar in and out of the water
Unlit, sunrise mist
Rhythm of oars, like breathing
In the day to come
Far From Normal
Hmm…this poem came together with an overheard phrase: ‘Far from normal’ and every Physicist knows a Normal is 90 degrees to a surface and also about Foucault’s pendulum…I’ll leave you in the capable hands of Google.
It’s also an experiment in double Haikus
Crimped, the brass nipple
Closed tight on a steel cable
And pressed up, docking
Into a recess
High up, ceiling high the thin
Cable dangling free
Perpendicular,
Taut, tense, a still leaden bob
Hollowed-out, tied, and
Hung like the guilty
Facing ultimate questions
Ready now, to swing
Filled with Indian
Ink, its black blood emptying
Hesitantly through
A small orifice
Spilling onto a canvas
Stretched out on the floor
Shoulder to shoulder
A crowd, as for a hanging,
On tiptoe, craning
Waiting for the bob
Its unseen earthly artist
In fine oscillations
Petals of jet black
Painted each day for a year
Until death draws near
A gallows-crowd back
To watch the last ink-drop fall
A final full stop.
Its legacy gift:
Spiral art and animation
Of life spent, ending
In shocking beauty
Condemned, maybe, but so,
So far from normal
Caught Unawares
When the things that are turn out to be not so
Everything was in the right place:
That morning blind routine
Requiring minimal conscious thought
I mean, the toothbrush and paste
We’re waiting, parked neatly - check
Second finger found the kettle switch – no problem
Fridge door opens, chilly jam and marmalade jars
Casually thrown up with right hand and caught in the left
No milk, no matter
Shoes on, front door unlocked
It’s a two minute walk shuffling through the autumnal leaf shower
A comforting orange red stillness
So quiet as if the pavements have stopped breathing
Or the trees have witnessed a rapture
I press on, disregarding the silence
There’s the shop, lights on
Checking my jacket pocket for the wallet I occasionally forget
I extend my hand to the door
It doesn’t open
It is difficult to convey just how deep
Is the shockwave that is travelling
In and out of my mind, my grip on normality,
Like some untold tide
For twenty years, maybe twice a week
The door, often left slightly open, yielded
But not this early unassuming Friday morning
I push again, my brain and my sense disconnecting
Cleaving into non-identical twins: wisdom and will
The one locked into a fierce debate with the other
One, calm, the other incapable of reading the runes
As ever committed to hopeless causes trying the handle once more
It is then that I’m shaken awake
The lesson once again makes me laugh quietly
As I turn, no milk in hand
And kick the leaves into another random pattern
Knowing again there is no right place
For things to be held
Like time itself, caught unawares
In it own spider’s web
Awaiting an unknowable fate:
The order of things is to be shaken
Before the final things to come
Yes, it’s good to be reminded
And walk back to where the cup of black tea
Is calling forlornly for what is missing
A Tale of Two Pubs
I’ve painted this picture before, this time with more spit and sawdust, the other half of the Saturday story
These two pubs, unpaired
Not by compass and meridians
But by a subterranean,
Inexpressible knowing,
Where words are crude
Instruments failing to
Distinguish differing
Smiles of satisfaction
On a Saturday, for lunch,
Lynch and I and others
Traipse through slate-grey
Winter wind and drizzle
Like intent pilgrims
Discomforts disdained
To the Ruby Lounge
A meeting place for toothless old men
And us, barely shaving
But young and old shuffle their way
Across the sawdust-strewn floor
To an altar rail, for communion
The priest, taking our offerings
Clasped with tattooed hands the tap
And poured forth the weekly libation
A pint of Youngs
Eyes meet, publican priest
With his latest converts,
Silenced initiates,
Their inexperienced hands
Still tracing the bevels
Of their fathers’ jugs
Embarrassed to show
Too much satisfaction
Smiles concealed,
We return,
Across the sawdust
To the wobbly table
Sticky with yesterday’s beer
And spoil the moment with
Mundane talk of Monty Python
And Parmesan cheese on toast
Maybe a bath and some spray later
And a trench coat if cold and dark
A collection of poorly paid pilgrims
Stomping their feet against the cold
Nudge away from minor village roads
To find the path across fields
Illuminated by a watching moon
Towards the waiting lights
The Share and Coulter
There, eight animated souls,
Bums on wooden seats
With tied-on cushions,
A polished table and dry beer mats,
And a roaring fire just beyond…
Clueless to how daringly close
To heaven they’ve come, huddle
Pictures of long-dead Shires
And their barrelled drays
Looking on from the walls
Witness my blaspheming
And Christ’s secret agent asking
‘Why did you say that?’
Unseen angels lean in
Licking their lips
The Moon is Watching
There was the morning moon looking down from a gorgeous pale blue cloudless sky…words followed
This last week
The Moon has perched herself
Above the fir tree opposite
Tapping me on the shoulder
Each morning
So I don’t forget
To say Good Morning
Normally the Moon stays hidden
And like some nocturnal beast
Shyly puts on her cloak
Of misty white light
Before perching -
Up there
But this Moon
Maybe a different one
Is a breakfast feast
A pre-running sight
Been waiting
With some impatience
For someone to see her
Importance, significance
Like the Christmas story
But unlike the Magi
With their Eastern wisdom
My mind is blank…
If there is a baby in the fir tree
It would seem untimely
Unlikely…
As if she hears my absence
She turns, flees, and fades
But has one last trick
As she sinks and sinks
What was a bright sixpence in the sky
Is now a translucent sovereign
Her reign extending ever larger
Just beyond the horizon
Dirt under our fingernails
I think I'll let this poem speak for itself
This is why I believe in Jesus
Not because of carefully constructed choirs
Or the booming bass of a Pentecostal party
Or priests pressing you for pounds and pence
Or the frocks, the bishop’s staff
The dog-collars demarcating You from Me
No, I believe in Jesus because
He who believed in me believes in you
He who kicked a can down the road
With Lazarus, his mate, the one who died temporarily
I believe in Jesus because he wept
At the tomb - it was not all miracles – and
Over Jerusalem like our mothers’ weep over us
And because he loved Mary
Magdalene
A woman so pained,
So disfigured by her demons
In so much…poo
Then he came and wiped it away…the poo
Her sufferings, her tears
And made her love life and love again
And to linger in the garden
When Jesus outdid Lazarus
And, posing as a gardener
Gave us all
All of us with dirt under our fingernails
A taste of resurrection
Yes, I believe in Jesus
October 7th 2023 Remembrance
October 7th 2023 Hamas murder unarmed Kibbutz and Supernova music festival goers and take 251 hostages, 97 of whom are yet to be returned home. A poem of remembrance.
Not once have I
Been caught in the careful
Eye-beam of a ravenous wolf
Foxes, cunning as ever,
Stand and stare before
The shadows take them
And dogs, tongues lolling,
Trot undangerously
Learning only to love
But it was the pack
That hunted their prey
Eye-to-eye, heart-to-heart
In a murderous pact
Slaying the unguarded
In civilian slaughter
Biden’s shock: photos of
A baby riddled with bullets,
A soldier beheaded
Supernovans burned alive
In cars and hideaways
Trapped in a hatred
A sink hole
In the world’s morality
Legitimacy to govern
Torn to shreds
We weep until
The wolves’ eyes dim
Today we remember
The unforgotten, the 97
Yet to return home
But we will remember
In wrath to remember mercy
We who have been wolves
We, called to be Samaritans,
Let healing come
From unlikely places
Let war be undone like
Untied laces dragging
Along the ground
Singing songs
Of miracle
And wonder
He makes wars cease
He shatters the spear, be still
And know that I am God
Cold, Day 5, 6 a.m.
Day 5 of a flu-like cold. No more need be said. I'm a bloke.
Friday:
Monoclonal
Antibodies launch
An autumn offensive at
The expense of my limp arms
Heavy as I drag myself up the stairs,
Shuffling, sniffling, spluttering, coughing
In search of yet more tissues and an empty bin
Before shutting down under a blanket in the lounge
Now 7.45 a.m. I sleep for an hour, deep dive into nothing
Somehow it works. My eyes feel more like optical instruments
Not banging balls of pain, engaging in the world of fallen leaves
I put a coat on and venture out, aware that matted hair is not
A wholesome sight. Grunt-conversation at the shop is the
Most I can envisage, politely. The autumn offensive is
Underway but victory is a weekend wish. Milk and
Paracetamol packets in hand I scowl inwardly
At the RNA enemy and nod encouragingly
At my lymphocyte army as they engulf
Titchy coronaviruses before they
Hitch yet more rides on my
Ever-unzipping DNA
10.30. Poem
Tea.
Holy Fire
Guy Fawkes Night, on November 5th, often renamed Firework Night , commemorates the Gunpowder Plot, a close shave in 1605 for Parliament when Guy Fakes' plot to blow up Parliament was discovered.. It had been a Catholic plot.
This year, Anna Chegwith
Took hold of organising
Lower Banford’s Guy Fawkes Night
Beyond the boundary
Opposite the oak tree
Far from the pavilion
Anna, Catholic on a Sunday,
Firefighter by Monday,
Had two loves: order and disorder
White-shirt-buttons-neat-Chegwith
And anarchic-Anna, depatterned,
Chaotic, randomly romantic, Anna
Committee-meeting-Chegwith reigned
Precise distances to the rope
Fire station - informed
Weather reports - updated
Decision timelines – strict
Traffic lights on amber
At home, Anna put the word out:
Invite the blind, the deaf, the crippled
The autistic, anosmians, dysgeusians
And ‘Primary children to bring wood’
Written on a to do list, sat on the loo
Flushed before Chegwith could find it
The parents set to compete as ever
Anna subverting Ghegwith
Chegwith suppressing Anna
November the 5th arrives
Dusk is gathering, damp air cooling
A rope is in place, a matrix of fireworks
50 yards downwind from the pyre
Its wigwam of standard tree trunks
Chegwith’s firm foundation
Pressed into the ground by odd offerings
Old tables, bookcases, broken rocking horses
Uprooted trees, an old brown piano
Rising to meet the stars, trembling and creaking.
The crowd now hushed,
Waiting for Anna to kneel, and
Lit taper in hand to ignite the bonfire
A wild conflagration feeds the night sky
Tasted in the air, its roar heard,
The heat so real it could be held
Red raging flames compensating
The disabled, first behind the rope
Guy Fawkes Night, an enhancer, for all ages
Battling with burgers and dripping ketchup.
Yes, it had a guy, a nod to Parliament
And on Sunday Anna Chegwith,
Smelling sweet from the smoke, still,
Knelt again, as we all do before holy fire
PoW
I wanted to write something about the Princess of Wales' video update of her post-chemotherapy recovery. A Haiku with a deliberately ambiguous title emerged.
Like flowing water
Broadcast on our soil of fear
Seeds of courage sown
Written a few days after the Princess of Wales’ broadcast a video update of her post-chemotherapy recovery
Apalachee
Apalache - two teachers and two pupils lie dead after a teenage boy opens fire. A poem that requires little interpretation.
When the grey bullets fly
And life ruptured, stilled, and
Stripped from the living
Joins the unbreathing
Caught in unblinking grief
We all die.
Centuries of constitutional
Misadventure, deep-rooted
A torpor state of mind
A dream that spells
Freedom in another’s blood
Red raw, delusional.
Remove the rifle
Silent words in pleading eyes
What anguish sent a message
Brain to finger to pull?
And in our heart-recoil?
Agony. Mourning. A soft reprisal
Too weak to be heard
But exhaustion will have her way
Jericho walls, stiff with pride
Will loosen, will collapse
Second amendment amended
No longer deferred
Leaning on a hoe
Sometimes it's what isn't happening that catches the eye
The sun, bleary-eyed as I
Barely peering above the horizontal,
Pours down its slow post-dawn light
On a muggy morning, August,
Dew rising, humid and still
The muffled commute underway
Eight men arrayed
In orange jackets and legs
Swap cigarettes and light up
The prelude to an attack
In slow motion on a
Weed-infested dockside kerb
I join the runners old and not so
Immunised against joint pain
With earbuds full of
Marley or Madness
Or, in my case,
Berry, the Black Country poet
The sun rises; the sweat falls
In great drops, my shirt
Monsoon damp, a testimony
To efforts that will not trouble
Or terrify
Any records known to man
The end, and I walk the perimeter
Of Cumberland Basin to cool
At the far end, under the Sun
The same eight in orange
Stand prodding at the enemy
With dedicated timidity
One, leaning on his hoe,
A hoe that mimics
The angle of lazy urination,
Fails to move, fearing defeat,
‘The weeds will win’ it’s
Beneath him to bend
The others shuffle, smoke, and scrape
Towards their first tea break
As I head home
To put the kettle on
And break sweat once again:
Pen in hand
General Synopsis
Woke up this morning to a gale and recycling bins rumbling down the road
Wild, wet, and windy
Coke can rattles down the street
Drunk singing God save the King
Cromarty Forth Tyne
Dogger Fisher German Bight
Thames Humber Dover
Low pressure rising
Riot on the Isle of Wight?
Flag flies at half-mast
Fading in the sun
Union Jack red, white and blue
Coke can, still at last
The Emptying
Kenosis is the Greek word for emptying and a curious image St Paul used to describe Christ who 'emptied himself'
At number 4, grass grew from June to August
The solid oak front door obscuring
Bills unpaid, takeaway vouchers,
And a postcard from the Sun.
The body was well-dressed and mostly absent
A monocle, a mould-infested bow tie
Dark brown shoe polish, can open,
Brush gripped tight in his bent
Rigor mortis fist, bones only.
He’d choked, it would seem
Long-distant family members
Attracted by duty and pecuniary matters
Like flies to the body
Sifted, binned, sold, and removed
Nearly a century of accumulated
Memories needed no more.
Every object passed through
Their executor-digestive system
And eliminated as is the way
Along the legal path
Across the road at number 13
The front lawn is mown regularly
And a new door affixed last week
The old one, also oak, broken up
Stored in the shed,
Ready, one day, to feed the fire-pit
Its red flame energy
To be faced one last time
Its ashes to be taken by the wind
To the wild north
To the wild north
The emptying
A peristalsis of sorrow
An unavoidable appointment
With life in its fulness
A compulsory education
One that Christ knew
Emptying Himself
Of all that got in the way
Of Him touching rotten flesh
Or healing the broken-hearted
Slack Jaw at War
East meaning East London, ‘Ackney a little short of Hackney, hear the accent and mourn the disappearing distinction between vowels
‘Ackney Slack Jaw
That’s my name
Not black no blame
I’m a white rhyming jackdaw
Not wild, not tame
Some rules in East
Don’t look at me in my eyes
Stay lowly, be cool as ice
Not hostile, I don’t smile
Safe with me, not deceased
No conformity, no truce
I flatten my vowels
Let my jaw hang loose
My I, so sly
My words so smooth
No conformity, no truce
I carry a grammar hammer
Your e’s and your a’s
Rebuilt in Slack Jaw ways
Your o’s and your u’s
No stranger to abuse
I carry a grammar hammer
I’m a white rhyming jackdaw
Not wild, not tame
Not black, no blame
‘Ackney Slack Jaw
That’s my name
Friday’s Irregular Poetry Corner: The Song of the Bow
Israel…Gaza…lament
I woke up this morning aware at some point that I didn’t have a poem to share for Friday’s Irregular Poetry Corner. That’s OK as it has always wanted to live up to its name – Irregular.
So, to my breakfast routine: Malted wheats + homemade muesli + cuppa tea, milk no sugar, and a bible reading. This morning’s reading was 2 Samuel chapter 1 which includes David’s lament, The Song of the Bow, a poem, a pouring out of grief over the death of King Saul and his son Jonathan in battle.
I offer selected verses from The Song of the Bow in the form of tercets. The phrase How the Mighty have Fallen is often attributed to Shakespeare or Churchill but borrowed, in fact, from David shortly before he became King David.
The battle has extraordinary resonance today. The Philistines, victorious in this battle with Israel in which their archers wounded Saul and Jonathan, occupied the same region we know today as the Gaza Strip: the ancient rivalry continues.
Maybe let this poem open our ears to hear the laments poured out by Jews and Gazans as the days of suffering continue nearly 10 months after the despicable attack against unarmed Jews by Hamas in October 2023 and the hostages taken.
The Song of the Bow
The beauty of Israel is slain on your high places
How the mighty have fallen
Tell it not in Gath
O mountains of Gilboa
Let there be no dew nor rain upon you
For the shield of the mighty is defiled
Saul and Jonathan were beloved and pleasant in their lives
And in their death they were not divided
They were swifter than eagles and stronger than lions
O daughters of Israel, weep over Saul
Who clothed you in scarlet with luxury
Who put ornaments of gold on your apparel
How the mighty have fallen in the midst of battle
I am distressed for you, my brother, Jonathan
Your love to me…surpassing the love of women
How the mighty have fallen
And the weapons of war
Perished!
In some unknown way, a lament can do what victory and/or defeat in battle cannot. There is an unseen limit to suffering, a Stop sign, and a lament is a prelude, I suggest, to the deep cry of Enough! uttered in the final seconds before peace reigns.
Guest poet: Harry Baker - Impossible
Guest poet: Harry Baker…a real wordsmith
Impossible - by Harry Baker
Thank You
A thank you letter? Certainly a thank you poem
Descending from Tryfan
In an early morning autumnal mist
Three nights of hill-bound
Body odour to prove our ordeal
The welcome end in sight
And my joy is eclipsed
By sudden uncalled-for
Patella pain
A decade passes
And I, unable to run
And reduced often to
Less than a child’s pace
A young man no longer young
Stoic I, sad at heart
But head held high
Push on with private prayers
After-dawn rituals continue
There’s cereal, toast, tea
Bible readings, and tie-tying
All with variable success
A pre-work regularity but
Interrupted on this day
By one unbidden word:
‘Run!’
A command from Beyond
Authoritative, inescapable
Unharsh, inaudible
More than a word
So, crippled I
Locate my battered trainers
Old from lack of use
And find a gravel path
And obey, for a quarter of a mile
Then a mile the next day
Half-marathons follow on
Patella pain consigned
To the past
I run now on new fuel
Offerings of thanksgiving
To the One
Who interrupted my prayers
And made me an
Implausible parable
On two legs:
Therefore strengthen the hands
That hang down
And the feeble knees
And make straight paths for your feet
So that what is lame
May not be dislocated
But rather be healed…
…let us run the race