Watching them fly in.

 

Watching them fly in

 

I never agreed with it

Too much emotion

The rejection said

 

I wrote something

After nine eleven

Watching them fly in

Not knowing

What they’d been leaving

Arriving in distress.

 

She had a brother

Working in the first tower

A place that I’d known

A place I’d been

She didn’t know

If he was living

The phone call came

And she smiled again

He was alive.

 

Long ago

As I walked home

I heard

I felt

The explosion

My classmates

Fathers, brothers

Uncles, men

Had been lost

We use that word

Too loosely.

Killed.

Too emotional.

What have we become?

Stone pillars

Wooden Indians

Vacant

 

People live

Vicariously

Just by television

I’ve lived in a time

That isn’t literally

Real or unreal

I write

About emotions

The connections

People, times and places

That are real.

 

Season change

Mowed the orchard and took sheepdog for daily seven mile walk. Met dog friends! Mused why not International Poetry Day. Spoke with my friend Bill from Killarney that Yeats seems to be slipping away. Find I’ve been asked to read a voice over for a film. But I’m yearning for frosts and snow as the hint of a change of season begins the day. Tomorrow I’ll proof the stables ahead of bad weather. And my thoughts turn to Lampedusa and the roughening sea.221.JPG

Roofied

Roofied

Twisted sheets,
Egyptian cotton,
pin me.
my body
collected, studied,
by a face
I don’t know,
although
Its owner has been
here all night.
Has pressed
his weight
into the hollow
of the bed,
and me
underneath,
still as a fawn
caught
in the sights.
He stretches,
hung over,
brushes the nape
of my neck,
wants breakfast,
and my number,
like it never happened.

Yesterday
I went for a drink.

Yesterday …
I struggle …

Yesterday …
I struggle …
to remember.

By the poet Cath Campbell.

Drowning

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Drowning

 

I felt the shove

At my back

And tried to turn

To find something

Firm to hold

To prevent my fall

That’s when I saw you

And my breath

Gave out

Hitting the water

But then the sinking began

The dragging down

By my wet clothes weight

Into the depths

I felt the deepening cold

Of lake water

Enter my body

And the fear too

Uncontrollable shivering

Is never

Pleasant

I sank slowly

The surface

The light

Dimming

It was the slowness

That frightened me

I needed to free myself

Of the weight

That drew me into darkness

Shedding clothes

That gripped my body

The barrier

Between life and air

There have been

More recent times

When falling into darkness

And the gut twisting

Feelings of despair

And the coldness of fear

And it was the need to let go

That saved me

And the urge

To grasp life

And head for the light.

Matahara

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Matahara

This morning I stopped

to listen to a robin singing

in the tall birch tree

that overhangs our garden.

 

It is mid-August in Wales

but the robin’s singing

was the wistful and shrill

notes of an October song.

 

And it’s on cold clear

mornings like this

that I am reminded

of a small town

called Matahara

in the Rift valley

A lorry stop

on the badly cambered

rutted out road

from Addis to Djhibuti.

 

And of staying overnight

in the old school

over-shadowed by the cauldera

of Mount Fantalle

 

And woken by the sounds

of camels and the shouts

and whistles of men

returning safely again

from the long search

for nourishing pasture

emerging through

the rising dust

that shrouded and gauzed

the clear light of morning.

 

The sight of a man

running and carrying

a new born camel

on his shoulders.

 

And the sounds

of the joy of children

welcoming the men

their fathers, uncles

and brothers safely

back to their homes

 

All this will stay with me

for the time allowed

as I hear that the rains

have failed again.

 

RAC

 

Published in “Uncertain Times” Octavo Press 2016.