Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts

Thursday 5 September 2019

TO MY WIFE ON ST. VALENTINE'S DAY, 14 FEBRUARY 2018

O my wife, I love you!
I always have, I always will,
The way you talk, the way you laugh, 
The kindness that you always show,
That gorgeous smile of yours, 
Your cheerful sense of fun, 
Which always makes your grandsons giggle, 
These are some, but only some
Of the many reasons why
I shall love you till I die.  

Saturday 5 January 2019

TO MY WIFE.

Bridget you are my darling, Bridget you are my wife,
O you are such an angel that you wholly light up my life.
When you walk in the room, I am filled with delight,
For your smile is so cheerful and your eyes are so bright,
That I can think of nothing that I more want to see
Than the face of that sweetheart who is always with me.

Thursday 12 February 2015

TRUE LOVE

My love is like a steady climbing rose,

Because with all the years that pass,

It builds upon the past and grows

Like further lush and verdant grass.

My darling, the one thing in this life

That I can say I really know

Is that  I want to be with you, my wife,

So that my love can expand and glow.

Your voice, your smile, your touch, your kiss,

These are the things for which I care.

While I have them all my life is bliss,

My joy is full, my luck is rare.

O Angel of my heart and home,

I love you and you alone!

A PROUD AND SHARP DELIGHT

This poem was written by Air Commodore Alastair Panton, CB, OBE, DFC (1916-2002). Originally published in "Wings  - and other things" by Group Captain Hugh Lynch-Blosse in 1990, it reappeared in "Six Weeks of Blenheim Summer, an RAF Officer's Memoir of the Battle of France 1940", by Alastair Panton and Victoria Panton Bacon, Biteback Publishing, 2014. This poem captures in a delightfully evocative fashion a pilot's rapture at the experience of flight.

I love to fly from night to day,

And, pendant, wait the first smudged ray

With tired eyes. Then day breaks free;

The cold sky glows; and suddenly

The coastline smiles upon the sea.

And there's no proud and sharp delight

To match the loneliness of flight

Above the clouds. Then, later, high

Over the sunset, I hush the sky

With gliding turns, until I fly

Along the darkening rolling grass

To let my wheels, oil-cushioned, pass

Unfaltering from gentle flight,

As gentle as the glimmering light.


Saturday 19 June 2010

" SEEN THROUGH A GRILLE OF SQUARES " A POEM.

Seen through a grille of squares, the sky,
Is split up, intersected, neat,

Closely related, tree and cloud,
Rooftop and spire trick the eye

To think geometry complete,
To make the world an ordered crowd

Of lines and squares, intensify
Rationalism in defeat.

This is another way to shroud
An ill-conceived complexity

Beneath a simple form, replete
With all the errors of the proud,

Who hope, by thinking, to retain
A cosmos in their compassed brain.

SKULLPOEM

Behind the tegumental mask
Mastodons blurt in the muddy mind
Jocose congeries of trolls
Lurk in its veering groves
But after the terrible percussion of the clotting jetsam
The gracious triremes out of memory
Cleave the null striations,
Spurn the precocious fealty of wood.

Saturday 5 June 2010

" STONES " - A POEM.

The air is spun disjointed. Sounds and days,
The idling fingers of our lassive drift,
Endeavour to restate the discontent
Of minimal encounters - a grimace
A hand, a block of stone ... The years that went
to dogged balancing of each on each
(Triglyph and metope, tongue to slotted rift)
Scattered like armour on a blood-stained beach.

Lists were of course prepared, proportions found
And counterchecked - " So many thousand load
Of marble", " Such a curve, viewed from the ground,
Gives the effect of being straight" - amounts
Recalculated, notes transferred ... But still
Retracts in silence time's unfailing Once;
Before the cart-dust settled on the road,
The whirlwind breaks about the sacred hill.

Accept, examine, redetermine, hold -
Within the fractured pattern I can trace
Contorted shudders of reality.
Feel where the shadowed gridlines interlace,
Woven through dust-stained, water-melon streets,
Their sudden brief constraint; recall the old
Unvisioned fears ... The final memory
Shards into ashes and scatters all retreat.




Tuesday 13 April 2010

" ICARUS " - A POEM.



The poem below is inspired by the famous tale of Daedalus and Icarus as told by the Latin poet Ovid in lines 220-235 of Book VIII of his "Metamorphoses" (for an account of this see Sabidius' translation of this great work available elsewhere on his blog). The poem presented here, which is in the form of a 14-line sonnet, suggests that Icarus' attempt to transcend the normal physical limitations of a man by flying through the air was fatally undermined when his father called out to him by name. Thus, the confidence of a man engaged on any great endeavour can be dented by a reminder of past frailties, and so the sublime can subside into the commonplace.

Still, when the spiralled heights had slid beneath,
He hovered vibrant, feather-fingered hands
Greeting the wind. Enraptured, sea and land
Span into order; reason held its breath
And plunged - to rise its talons gripped on truth.
The last equations of eternity
Resolved themselves, as air and height and sea
And depth and land encircled into one,
Proving him what he knew - until
"Icarus! Icarus! Not so near the sun!"
Shattered his knowledge; named, once more a man,
Stoned by the weight of all he did not know,
Side-slipped, face downward, drably mythical,
Pinioned towards the sunlit sea below.