Tuesday 27 November 2012

Freedom

Onto the light fitting the captive sparrow flew
Leaving trails of liquid fear in her wake.
Clinging, embracing her temporary refuge from
Tormented flight, eyes half closed, beak half open,
Panting in time to the rise and fall of her downy breast.
Strange, airless and unnatural, the white walls
Besieged her, the open window guarded by a billowing predator
That sought to ensnare her on the wing.
Through terror-dream vision she perceived her home dimension.
The cool breeze beckoned and the azure heaven awaited as with
Courage that would shame an eagle, the tiny fledgling
Fluttered, fell onto the weather-worn sill and with
No backward glance, exchanged the insensibility of her
Suffocating confinement for the sweet vital breath of the
Garden air.
© JEFT 1996

Monday 19 November 2012

Quarry Town

Spiralling flocks of migrating birds rise high
Soaring above the timeless beauty of the limestone valley.
Swirling clouds of grey quarry dust descends
Down onto the gleamless town.
It is Autumn.
Nature now, before the fall of Winter’s hoary curtain
Acts out the Finale for yet another year.
Hawthorns and elderberries, dressed for the show,
Dance amidst copper leaves from burnished trees,
Falling and drifting, blanketing the frost chilled fields.

All things bright and beautiful.

In the stone town, houses huddle together
Scant protection from the threatening storms.
In their midst, a yellow refuse van, glimpse seen, weaves
In and out, out and in, shuttling to and fro
Through the threads of endless grey.
All is still. Hushed.
The silence breaks.
The quarry stirs and belches, spewing rock from its belly,
Manna to the mechanical parasites who pounce on the fresh meal,
Gnawing and tearing, gulping down huge mouthfuls.
Dogs bark, unseen.

All creatures great and small.

The school lies empty by the roadside.
Displaced limestone broods where children once played
Growing, spreading, burying.
Praying for a reprieve, a nearby cottage sits neglected,
Its inner life force removed to the cemetery, by the quarry.
Dust to dust.
By the tombstones, a small chapel crouches by the wall
Indistinguishable from cow sheds on the landscape.
Refuges for all God’s creatures.
The church in the town advertises bingo on the service boards.

All things wise and wonderful.

Down the mud-streaked road, and old man hobbles and hops
Avoiding the blank, cheerless eyes of the quarry hydra.
He reaches sanctuary in The Rising Sun pub
Symbol of hope amidst the enveloping gloom.
Another day. Another explosion dissecting the living body of the land.
Monsters roar. Hills shudder.
Wind moans. Dogs whimper.
Earth sighs.
The black birds fly away, mourning.

The Lord  God made them all.

©1986

Saturday 17 November 2012

End Days

Stone November sky hangs heavy and sullen,
Cold and damp as a church crypt and just as merry.
God! Even the seagulls overhead are quiet, wings
Sagging as they cut through the ice-laden rain that
Falls on the bare land laced with drifting wood smoke.
Somewhere in the distance dogs bark and my soul lurches,
Searches for a memory misplaced but not entirely forgotten,
When on a day such as this I sat as still as I do now
Observing the dying days of the year, mouldering leaves
Underfoot and the frozen, nipped, muffled faces of those
Passing to the echoes of mournful howls.
©JEFT 2007