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Posts Tagged ‘Church’


A biting breeze and thin drizzle

Denote December’s inevitable

If uninvited return;

Twilight descends

In the ancient churchyard.

Never has the phrase

“Quiet as the grave”

Seemed more apt.

As I pause to tie my bootlaces

By the Town Cross, venue for

Mayor making for centuries,

My body shudders as

A young woman brushes past,

The hem of her blue dress

Grazing the grass border

And her white headpiece

Fluttering in the wind.

She carries provisions –

Bread, leeks and a

Small flagon of beer –

For the poor of the parish

In a round wicker basket,

Forswearing another

Potentially lucrative tryst

With a Northumbrian nobleman,

Orchestrated by a despairing father.

Her head bowed, she whispers

“Good evening, sir, God be with you”.

Before I can frame

An intelligible response,

She disappears behind the west window. 

Composing myself as best I can,

I shamble past unremembered tombs,

Narrowly avoiding a collision

With a rat scuttling across my path

To the comparative sanctuary

Of the lopsided lychgate

Leading into Church Street.

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This is a writer’s town.

Where, in quiet corners of coffee shops,

Caressing cake and cappuccino,

On new varnished cliff top benches, 

In tiny studio apartments,

And above galleries and gift shops,

Diligently, they polish their craft

In solitude and patient struggle.

Where, down the steep, unforgiving hill,

Past higgledy-piggledy buildings

That shelter the secrets of centuries,

Old men, like modern day gunslingers,

Shuffle with shabby, sagging satchels

Stuffed with story scraps and post-it notes,

Lassoed around their wrinkled necks.

Where restless waves wash over shingle,

Shifting the site of a billion pebbles,

And where small, redundant, fishing boats,

Their hulls rotting and history forgotten, 

Are nudged and tickled by the turning tide

And then left for dead as the sea sweeps back.

Where, on a mile long thoroughfare

Of lawn and flowers and grand hotels,

Echoes of genteel, whispered discourse

Float across the unremitting breeze,

And the plaintive cry of a seagull chick

Resonates across the ragged rooftops.

Where the solemn chimes of an ancient church

Dedicated to an Anglo-Saxon girl,

Ring out at dusk under Shelley’s pale moon,

And where cracked, crippling, steep steps

Unsettle the anxious wandering scribe

Searching seaward for that elusive line.

This is a writer’s town.ffee shops,

Caressing cake and cappuccino,

On new varnished cliff top benches, 

In tiny studio apartments,

And above galleries and gift shops,

Diligently, they polish their craft

In solitude and patient struggle.

Where, down the steep, unforgiving hill,

Past higgledy-piggledy buildings

That shelter the secrets of centuries,

Old men, like modern day gunslingers,

Shuffle with shabby, sagging satchels

Stuffed with story scraps and post-it notes,

Lassoed around their wrinkled necks.

Where restless waves wash over shingle,

Shifting the site of a billion pebbles,

And where small, redundant, fishing boats,

Their hulls rotting and history forgotten, 

Are nudged and tickled by the turning tide

And then left for dead as the sea sweeps back.

Where, on a mile long thoroughfare

Of lawn and flowers and grand hotels,

Echoes of genteel, whispered discourse

Float across the unremitting breeze,

And the plaintive cry of a seagull chick

Resonates across the ragged rooftops.

Where the solemn chimes of an ancient church

Dedicated to an Anglo-Saxon girl,

Ring out at dusk under Shelley’s pale moon,

And where cracked, crippling, steep steps

Unsettle the anxious wandering scribe

Searching seaward for that elusive line.

This is a writer’s town.

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When Paddy first played the pipes for me

I was transported back to ’68,

To a Skibbereen bar on a Saturday night

Where songs were sung of rebels’ fate.

Sixteen years old with fresh shaven head,

Rarely to be cut for five more years,

Heedless of the history of my hosts,

Oblivious of their eight centuries’ tears.

My first bitter pint of porter downed

And just as rapidly brought up again,

But my Irish roots were now confirmed,

From Tipperary via Hounslow I came.

And then a father staggering to his feet

In answer to the locals’ “your turn” shout,

Sang “My old woman and ‘er seven kids

Were a pickin’ all the big ones out”.

Instant celebrities we had become

Through this doggerel of a cockney lass,

Free drinks proffered and prolonged applause

And talk of the church next morn at Mass.

Vouchsafed the keys to Mrs McCarthy’s pub,

On fishing boats in cold Atlantic waters taken

To catch a multitude of mackerel and skate,

All these did my Irish heritage awaken.

When Paddy first played the pipes for me

I was transported back to ’68

To a Skibbereen bar on a Saturday night

Where songs were sung of rebels’ fate.

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