Sunday 27 June 2021

Absent



                                                                     Abandoned churches

Dear reader, 

The photographs today are to do with the poem 'Absent'.  I was walking alone in France years ago, miles from anywhere, when I came across an ancient church, dilapidated and rather scary.  I couldn't stop thinking about it and wrote the poem when I finally found my way back to the house we were renting.  What is it about empty buildings that have been used for joyful occasions and sorrowful ones? It is the left emotions I suppose, and that time passes for us all and what have we left. Well, our memories play a part, of course, and in this age, photographs and all sorts of things are exposed on our telephones, (about which I know very little!) But I had an enormous feeling of sadness while I was exploring the church and thought sadness must still be in the air.

                                                                                    *

Can one fall out of love a little with a place as opposed to a person?  We went to Lyme Regis again last week and I can't say it was a great success this time.  The weather was horrendous, rain bucketing down, a mist covering the view (which we went for) and the hotel was freezing.  I caught a chill as I had taken summer clothes when I should have taken clothes right for a November visit. And then the journeys. We have hardly been out of our nearby villages for over a year and and I was terrified on the M5 motorway.  Large trucks passing large trucks and cars hurtling by until I was about to have a panic attack and asked Francis to leave the motorway.  Then we got lost. Bloody satnav.

So our new life from now onwards is staying here, only foraging out to Witney or Chipping Norton.  And the relief at this  decision is enormous.

                                                                                       *

Absent

In this spectral place
there is a sense of desolation,
of God not being here
that strikes icy cold.
In the dank, dark nave
lies a decomposing owl,
a cobwebbed confessional, worn rotten,
and on the battered altar
a smashed wooden cross.

Long ago, did sunlight venture through
the cracked, ruby-stained glass window?
Were bread and wine transformed
into Christ's body and blood?
Did young men, expectant, marry
young women, kiss, and breathe in
the churchyard's sweet summer air?
And did tears blow away unseen
in the southern mistral winds,
after a service testifying that life was here
in this absent place?

                                                                                      *


With very best wishes, Patricia

Thursday 24 June 2021

No poem this week

 Dear Reader


This weekend I am staying in Lyme Regis so cannot write my Sunday blog with poem.

The seagulls are swooping everywhere, and visitors are advised not to feed them. But I love their special sounds when I wake up early and then watch them fly over the sea inthe early  morning. 

Francis played the pipes on the promenade and was much appreciated  by some, not all!

So I will be back next week and until then have a good week and may your God be with you.

Best wishes , Patricia


Sunday 13 June 2021

Yes, the Neighbours







                                                                            

                                                                              Neighbours
 

 

Dear Reader, 


I think it is interesting thinking about neighbours, new and old, and how best to approach them.  Do we want them to be our friends or simply be able to nod if we see them in the street?   We have some new neighbours.  They are a young couple with a small child.  Francis drew a card of welcome for them and we left it in their house to open when they arrived. Very sweetly they came round and introduced themselves to us, a doctor and a speech therapist and an adorable baby.  But we haven't seen them since.  My question is would they have liked us to call round and tell them where the best bread in town is to be bought, or how well we thought of the local dentist, or where were the best walks near our houses? Any of these things or none?

And the neighbours we have known for four or five years, what about them?  How much can we call on them? Three different couples and all delightful.  During lockdown each couple went shopping for us, dropped round (to the front door)  just to see we were coping, and spoke to us on the telephone several times.  Sadly I know that they are all very busy but one woman, we will call her Dora, loves my poetry and all the things she says about my poems are touching and poignant.  I would love to see more of her but know this is not possible. 

I suppose there is a sort of code for how to be a good neighbour.  Smiling when you see them but allowing them their space, seems to be about it.  


                                                                                     *

From Horace Walpole, June 14th, 1791, in Middlesex

'It froze hard last night: I went out or a moment to look at my haymakers, and was starved.  The contents of an English June are hay and ice, orange flowers and rheumatism.  I am now cowering over the fire.'


From Francis Kilvert, June 15th, 1873 in Wiltshire

'The sun and the golden buttercup meadows had it almost to themselves.....One or two people were crossing the Common early by the several paths through the golden sea of buttercups which will soon be the silver sea of ox-eyes.  The birds were singing quietly.  The cuckoo's notes tolled clear and sweet as a silver bell.'

                                                                                      *


Yes, the Neighbours

were very nice

two lovely children
playing quietly in the garden
a large friendly dog
no loud music
no noisy cars

I can't think
who would do this
to them

such a happy, smiling family
such a shame
such a waste

I am so sorry

But, of course,
we never spoke to them,
she said.

                                                                              *

With very best wishes, Patricia



Sunday 6 June 2021

That July



 

Dear Reader,

It seems that the famous painting by John Constable, known as 'The Hay Wain' was no such thing.  Most people apparently don't know the difference between a cart and a wagon.  A cart has two wheels and a wagon has four.  It is, in reality, a pole tug, designed and used to transport what remained of a tree after felling, when all the branches and foliage had been removed. What remained was the stock, which had to be taken to the foresters' premises so that it could be sawn into planks - via a saw pit. These vehicles would be soaked in a pond during the summer months to make sure that the spokes remained tight.

I have to say that most wagons, carts, and carriages look much the same to me. But I will look with more attention next time we go somewhere where there are these vehicles for us to inspect.


                                                                                   *

From Thomas Hardy, June 2nd, l865, in London

'Walked about by moonlight in the evening.  Wondered what woman, if any, I should be thinking about in five years' time.'

From Gilbert White, June 5th, 1782, in Hampshire

'My brother Thomas White nailed up several large scallop shells under the eaves of his house at South Lambeth, to see if the house-martins would build in them. These conveniences had not been fixed up half an hour before several pairs settled upon them; and expressing great complacency, began to build immediately.'

                                                                                   *


That July

we planned to walk
along the river bank,
play bridge,
stay overnight in
a superior hotel,
eat in a white
linen-clothed dining room,
exchange gossip, news,
make jokes.

But someone-other
planned other-wise.
No river walks, or talks,
or jokes.
A fatal illness struck,
marked "no reprieve",
with no allowance
for two days under a sunny sky,
our special summer treat,

that July.

                                                                               *

With best wishes, Patricia