Sunday 29 November 2015

Farm Portrait, 1880







Dear Reader,


Dormice, which live mainly in trees or shrubs, have been having a bad time crossing roads and railways of late.  This has had a very detrimental effect on the dormouse population being able to breed.  So various organizations such as "The People's Trust for Endangered Species" and "Wildlife Bridges" have thought of a way to help them.  They have built arboreal bridges, made out of ropes and poles, stretching across the roads and railways to allow the dormice to scuttle from one wooded area to another.   Where these bridges have been made, the results seem to have been very successful, and the dormice are now having a good time.

*

Farm Portrait, 1880

That's me in the painting, a potato-picking wife,
dressed in clogs, a woollen shawl, a woollen shirt.
I stand on stony ground with my riddle and my knife,
put potatoes in my apron, worn over muddy skirt.
And that's my husband, wearing an old cloth cap
over pale face and wistful eyes, digging with our son,
while coughing Sarah holds within her lap
the swaddled, crying babe, until our work is done.
Our house is cold, dark and full of mice,
the grind is hard, the winter weather harsh,
damp oozes from the walls, and we have lice,
the lonely peewit calls from the eerie marsh.
But, at dawn today, I heard a blackbird sing
and hope arose with thoughts of coming spring.


With very best wishes,   Patricia



Sunday 22 November 2015

The Perfect B and B

Dear Reader,


A Linnet

Since we have have all been distressed this week with terrible world news I thought I might share with you quotations from two authors from other, gentler, times. We have had the first frosty nights this week in the Cotswolds, for which I was very glad, not liking the warm unseasonable weather we had been having.

So on November 13th, l872, Thomas Hardy said in his Dorset journal:

 "The first frost of autumn.  Outdoor folk look reflective.  The scarlet runners are dishevelled: geraniums wounded in the leaf, open-air cucumber leaves have collapsed like green umbrellas with all the stays broken".

And Jane Austen said on November 17th, 1798 writing from Hampshire:

"What fine weather this is!  Not very becoming perhaps early in the morning, but very pleasant out of doors at noon, and very wholesome - at least everybody fancies so, and imagination is everything".

Ah, Jane Austen, we miss you.......

I must say I find the weather a very interesting subject, as most English people do, probably because it is ever unpredictable and baffles us all, much of the time.

                          *                                              


The Perfect B & B

Soft red brick, covered in roses,
the hall floor Cotswold stone,
the doors and furniture
applewood, mahogany, old pine,
chintz curtains in pretty bedrooms,
thick woollen carpets
and large white towels,
long and lovely views of distant hills,
sweet smells of lilies and lavender,
fresh asparagus for dinner,
duck and strawberries.

On the garden table,
its soft green feathers
ruffling gently in the wind,
lies a dead linnet.

                                                                       *

Very best wishes, Patricia

Sunday 15 November 2015

Small Moments of Warmth

Dear Reader,

                                                                 
                                                                   
                                                                      A Tilly Lamp

We have had in the last few weeks, months, and years, warnings about when and how we should dispose of our food, according to their "sell by" dates.  So I was very interested in the following two tales.  When a man helped his grandmother to move house in 1980, she prepared a delectable lunch from various tins,  and both the tin of Heinz vegetable soup and the tin of Libby's corned beef were  bought before the war.  Another man found in his great aunt's attic a presentation gift of a large slice of the royal wedding cake celebrating the marriage of the Prince of Wales and Princess Alexandra of Denmark, on 10th March, 1863.  Despite having been baked 117 years earlier it was, apparently, delicious.  So I think if it looks right and smells right, eat whatever it is with a merry heart.

*

Small Moments of Warmth


I remember a little warmth,
Joey trotting the family through Norfolk lanes,
the small yellow trap swaying in the sunshine.

I remember picnics on Yarmouth beach
with enough blue sky "to make a sailor's trouser".
We ate cucumber sandwiches.  Penguin biscuits.

I remember dark evenings,
the small warm flame from a Tilly lamp
lighting the kitchen, and sometimes for supper
we had chicken, chocolate mousse.

I remember a warm holiday in France
squeezed into the back of a car,
singing old thirties love songs.

But will these small moments of warmth,
at the end, be enough to heat and split
the heavy stones that circle the human heart,
allow salt tears to trickle through the cracks?

                                                                              *

Very best wishes, Patricia



             

Sunday 8 November 2015

Thanks, Private Norfolk

Dear Reader
So many words have been written about wars and their consequences by others far better qualified than I am.   So I just thought I would write a word or two about my own father.  He fought in the First World War as a major serving with the Royal Army Service Corps.  He was three times mentioned in Dispatches, and I have a letter written in January 1916 congratulating my grandparents, from a Colonel Harrison and other Officers, on their son's distinguished conduct and gallantry.  So today I am thinking of you, Dad, and am thanking you for doing your bit, and am sending you my love.

                                                                        *

Thanks, Private Norfolk


You left singing, with your pals,
marching for good and glory.
You hadn't yet dug a trench,
killed an unknown soldier,
seen dead bodies, smelt their stench,
heard comrades' last sickening cries.

You gave your life with generous heart,
believed the lies
dispatched by loftier ranks.
And so to you, dear Private Norfolk,
I give my salute,
and my deepest thanks


for swapping your mauve rain-skies,
your white-breast beaches, and beckoning sea,
your level fields of ripening corn,
to fight in foreign fields, for us,
for me.


                                                                          *

Very best wishes,  Patricia

Sunday 1 November 2015

Crosby

Dear Reader,

Do you remember how during this summer we all read about the strange aggression being shown by seagulls swooping down on people enjoying their sandwiches on the beach, or just walking along eating, annoying nobody?  Then there was a peacock who threw himself at his own image  that he saw in a car's door, scratching the paintwork and causing considerable damage.  Apparently he thought his image was a rival for his lady friend.  Now there is a new danger from hitherto gentle animals, the wild ponies from the Quantock hills.  Apparently they have taken a liking to sweet sugary leftovers from people's picnics, and their behaviour has become violent and aggressive in order to satisfy their desire for sweet things.  They have even butted and bitten a walker, and broken one woman's leg.

I must say I feel quite nostalgic for the days when I happily picnicked on a beach, undisturbed by seagulls  who didn't want to share my sandwiches, watched peacocks peacefully strutting about in ancestral gardens, and walked in the Somerset hills where the ponies didn't give me so much as a glance.                    

                                                                        *

I wrote this piece of Poetry/Prose after I had seen photographs of Crosby Beach.  Crosby Beach has 100 cast iron, life size figures,  stretching out to sea,  sculpted by the artist Antony Gormley.  I think they are very beautiful, magnificent even.


CROSBY

I pick up white shells from the beach and put them into the pocket of my dress.

They stare out to sea.  Tall and dignified they stand, all weathers, undisturbed.  Gulls perch on them, sea salt encrusts their faces, the tide laps at their ankles, and in winter fog obliterates their forms.  I wonder, do these statues whisper in the wind to each other?   Talk of important things?  Do they run along the beach when the crowds have gone or have a swim at midnight?   Perhaps, after dark, they stare out to the horizon, star directed, seeking eternity.  And, are they ever lonely?

I walk back to the car park wondering again, about what is real and what is not.


                                                                          *
Very best wishes, Patricia