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Archive for the ‘poetry’ Category


Mermaid Beach at Dusk

On a night like this,

The Cote d’Opale 

Might as well be 

A thousand miles away.

Sky and sea present 

An ashen canvas. 

It is impossible to tell 

Where one ends 

And the other begins. 

Barely a whisper from the surf tonight. 

Even Matthew Arnold’s 

“Grating roar of pebbles”

Is indecipherable,  

So faint is nature’s refrain. 

I am minded that across town,

Above Tontine Street’s old post office

A neon sign proclaims that 

“Heaven is a place 

Where nothing ever happens”.

And nothing is happening tonight 

In this particular speck of paradise.

But then everything is happening.

Just visible along the beach,

The lighthouse blinks through

The thick, enfolding gloom; 

A tuneless, forsaken church bell, 

Hangs silently suspended above 

Where once stood rotunda, swimming pool,

Boating lake and fairground rides.

A cockapoo puppy snuffles among 

The seaweed encrusted pebbles 

While its fretful owner punctures the peace 

With impassioned and fruitless pleas 

To accompany her back 

To the refuge of her Range Rover 

Parked at the foot of the desolate lift.

An empty tuna mayonnaise 

Sandwich carton flutters 

In the breathless breeze beside 

Folkestone’s modest imitation 

Of Avebury stone circle. 

A lone fisherman plants tripod and rod

On the forgotten beach, 

Reminding me of all night sessions 

On otherworldly Dungeness shingle 

With my teddy boy “Uncle Len”

And Eddie Cochran and Elvis on the radio, 

More than sixty years ago.

The overwhelming flatness 

Has deterred the customary 

Photographic shooting party 

From assembling to capture 

That final, ferocious blaze 

Of orange, purple, red and gold 

Over Sandgate’s adjacent shore. 

But tomorrow morning, life will return,

Children will again sprint into the sea,

Mindless of the sharp shells and shingle

That scrape and bruise their fragile feet;

And they will crave the comfort of towels

And the sanctuary of new beach huts.

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A day like any other –

In the middle of a war.

Except it isn’t.

Anticipation is high as 

Mabel and Gertie Bowbrick,

And devoted mother, Nellie,

Wait patiently in line

Outside Stokes greengrocers

On teeming Tontine Street,

For a special delivery

Of scarce fruit and vegetables

Later that afternoon.

At twenty minutes past six,

With darkening clouds 

Concealing surprise,

What sounds like gunfire 

Is heard from the direction of 

Shorncliffe Army Camp.

“It’s just training manoeuvres, 

It happens all the time”,

The general consensus

Among an unconcerned crowd,

Comforted that Blighty 

Remains up for the fight.

Until two minutes later

When the lengthening queue

Is obliterated by single bomb, 

Casually hurled from 

A passing Gotha plane.

Frederick and Arthur Stokes,

And their family

Perish on the spot,

Along with Mabel and Gertie 

And many of their neighbours.

Sixty one slain in total, 

The youngest three months old, 

Thirty six more lives snuffed out

Before the final toll is known

Nearly eight years later,

When valiant, much loved Nellie

Draws her last breath in the 

Royal Victoria Hospital,

Half a mile from the scene.

No rationing of potatoes as planned,

But rather a rationing of civilian lives,

Lost in a line of innocence and hope.

Today, flanked by brewery tap

And greasy spoon,

A small, pale blue plaque,

Sometimes adorned 

With a spray of flowers,

Stands by a bare, open patch,

Where tenacious weeds 

Thrust through shards of slate.

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I sit in coffee shops, 

That’s what I do,

Sometimes outside, 

To take in the view.

There I write poems 

Or post updates online,

To let my friends know 

That I’m doing fine.

I might have a big breakfast

Or occasionally brunch,

And if I stay long enough,

It might stretch to lunch.

Cappuccino, no chocolate,

Is my customary drink,

But after two or three,

I can’t hear myself think.

So I revert to a pot

Of refreshing Earl Grey,

Instead of just leaving,

It allows me to stay.

I quite like the quiet,

But am up for a natter,

With anybody else

There for that matter.

If I’m using my laptop

Which is not that robust,

To keep it performing

A wall socket’s a must.

Django’s and Steep Street

Are my regular haunts,

Eleto and the Hideaway,

And Brown’s on my jaunts.

I love Bobbies too

In the old harbour station,

And the literate Lift Cafe

By the regeneration. 

There are a few others

I sometimes frequent,

But not conducive to writing,

So my time’s not well spent.

I sit in coffee shops, 

That’s what I do,

Sometimes outside, 

To take in the view.

,

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Seagull, seagull sitting on a roof,

Seagull, seagull, resting and aloof.

No care in the world, so it would seem,

Silent and still, as if in a dream.

Meanwhile, in the cafe down below,

A full English breakfast is on show.

In fifteen minutes, the meal is done,

Save for some toast and piece of bacon.

The customer pays and walks away

While the seagull contemplates his prey.

Before the server can clear the table first ,

The seagull has swiftly done his worst.

Cutlery and crockery deafeningly clattered,

Adjoining seats and tables ketchup splattered. 

Bacon and slice of toast gripped in his beak,

The gull retreats with triumphant shriek.

Soon peace and quiet return to the scene,

An Eggs Royale is ordered, all is serene.

But………….

Seagull, seagull sitting on a roof,

Seagull, seagull, resting and aloof.

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From Danton Farm to harbour sluice gate,

The watercourse winds down towards the sea;

Now largely hidden from the public gaze,

It still has power to harm you and me.

Beside the metal footbridge at Broadmead,

It surfaces in Lower Radnor Park,

Where it glides and ambles beneath tall trees 

That screen the glinting sun and pierce the dark.

Empty crisp packets and chocolate wrappers

Lie wedged among the stream washed rocks,

Ivy draped grotto screams neglect, 

Moss stained stones and stagnant water mock.

But, vouchsafed by Victorian forebears,

It remains a quiet refuge from the race;

Where scurrying squirrels pursue their tails

And jackdaw and magpie compete for space.

Dog walkers trudge along the muddy track

That leads to paved Pavilion Road,

And one last glimpse of curving rivulet,

By fence at foot of Red Cow garden flowed.

No more the source of fresh water for the town,

No more the driving force for Foord Road mill,  

No more the home on planks for fishing folk,

Shoved underground a shopping need to fill.

From Tontine Street via Hatch coffee house

It meets returning tide by harbour wall;

A quiet end perhaps, but still pent up threat

In times of storm and flood that may yet fall.

Sweet Mill flow softly.

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Concrete and cranes now bestride the beach

Beneath Decimus Burton’s gracious Leas;

The shrieks of gulls and lapping waves,

Reassuring melodies of the seafront scene,

Are now drowned by the discordant notes 

Of drill and digger, hammer and pick.

Switchback and swimming pools,

Pier, putting green and amusement rides,

Once the joyous heart of local life,

All now just bittersweet memories,

Mourned on social media sites.

In their place, behind the boardwalk,

Another emblem of an earlier time,

A new, brighter world is taking shape 

On shell and shifting shingle ground.  

The red and white cars of the lift

Lie almost side by side, stalled 

And halfway up the dormant track,

Impatient for the flats to rise

And hasten their own resurrection. 

I loiter outside the waiting room,

Now popular pitstop on the promenade,

With a vegan sausage roll in my hand

And dust in my cappuccino.

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The situation as it stands
Is stay at home and wash your hands;
Shop only for essential needs
And exercise with dogs on leads;
Keep your distance, at least six feet,
And make no plans with friends to meet;
Do those jobs you have left for long,
Practice new skills or write a song;
Home school the children, if you can,
Sit in the garden, get a tan;
Spend more time in your living room,
Watch a film or connect on Zoom;
Do what works for you all the while,
But through this anxious time, still smile.

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As the dread death toll still rises,
The public debate turns to when
We can come out of this crisis,
Be granted to walk free again.

Experts speak of apex and curve,
Reaching one, flattening the other,
Before we even have the nerve
To our former world uncover.

If we relax restrictive rules
Of business law and social life,
Is it a recipe for fools
To circulate more viral strife?

Might social distance still be right
To minimise exchange of breath?
Will my plain croissant and flat white
Be worth the price of pain and death?

We must think carefully what’s best,
Heed the need for work and wealth,
Saunter in the summer sun blessed,
Only hand in hand with good health.

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When this is over,
Will we still display humility,
And value the simple things
We have, rather than strive
Aimlessly, shamelessly for more?

We can,
But will we?

When this is over,
Will we still show the respect,
Gratitude and appreciation
For those once unregarded folk
Who keep us safe and healthy?

We can,
But will we?

When this is over,
Will we still show empathy,
Tolerance and compassion,
Qualities mislaid in recent years,
For those less fortunate?

We can,
But will we?

When this is over,
Will we still relish nature’s gifts?
Listen to the thrilling birdsong,
Smell the spring blossom,
And nurture our fragile planet?

We can,
But will we?

When this is over,
Will we still view the world afresh,
And accept our true place in it,
As mutual partners, not masters,
And, by doing so, secure our future?

We can,
But will we?

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Even the gulls are taking a morning off
As I drift around the deserted harbour;
The tide is out, the sky deep blue,
And the beach warm and yielding
Under my inappropriate footwear.

Amidst this light brown desert,
Brief rivulets of muddy water
Command me to take a run
And leap to reach the
Next patch of firm dry sand.

The railway viaduct now fenced off,
The Grand Burstin and Rocksalt
Both dark and sad and empty;
And the metal gates to the Harbour Arm,
Anticipated host to thousands
Over this warm Easter weekend,
Are firmly closed.

On a morning as delicious as this,
It would have been perfect
To stroll its two concrete tiers;
But the only tears today
Are for the sick and fearful
Imprisoned in homes and hospitals
Across an anxious but resolute land.

Bob’s seafood stall and Folkestone Trawlers
Plough lone furrows on the deserted Stade,
While a pair of deep wrinkled fishermen
Lean against the chain railing and reminisce
When fish was plentiful and the ferries full.

I bound another murky stream
And lean against the pink house;
Planted in self-isolation,
Its former lustre lost too,
With peeling paintwork and ponder the fate
Of the next Triennial, triumphantly announced
Barely a month, but another lifetime, ago.

I turn the corner of the East Head
Under the rock perched orange house,
That, unlike its pink neighbour,
Has had a reviving lick of paint;
Two young girls lift their skirts,
And paddle in the gentle, shallow waves
On the incessant, incoming tide;
I cannot avoid the uncharitable suspicion –
A sign of these strange and fretful times –
That, as they giggle and jostle each other,
They may not be from the same household.

I could stay here for hours yet,
Till the water washes over my shoes,
But an insistent call of nature,
Prosaic and not infrequent visitor
To this man of a certain age,
Summons me to return swiftly
To my home by the park.

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