Welcome to my blog...whatever image springs to mind, be it a hippopotamus, Tigger, red-haired Highland cattle, or a simple kitchen table, 'Unless a Seed' is a four-legged creature. My hope is that having read a Book Review, a Poem, or a What is a Christian? or some random post in Everything Else, you will be kind enough to leave a comment or a short reply. And I hope you enjoy reading its contents
The Moon is Watching
There was the morning moon looking down from a gorgeous pale blue cloudless sky…words followed
This last week
The Moon has perched herself
Above the fir tree opposite
Tapping me on the shoulder
Each morning
So I don’t forget
To say Good Morning
Normally the Moon stays hidden
And like some nocturnal beast
Shyly puts on her cloak
Of misty white light
Before perching -
Up there
But this Moon
Maybe a different one
Is a breakfast feast
A pre-running sight
Been waiting
With some impatience
For someone to see her
Importance, significance
Like the Christmas story
But unlike the Magi
With their Eastern wisdom
My mind is blank…
If there is a baby in the fir tree
It would seem untimely
Unlikely…
As if she hears my absence
She turns, flees, and fades
But has one last trick
As she sinks and sinks
What was a bright sixpence in the sky
Is now a translucent sovereign
Her reign extending ever larger
Just beyond the horizon
Dirt under our fingernails
I think I'll let this poem speak for itself
This is why I believe in Jesus
Not because of carefully constructed choirs
Or the booming bass of a Pentecostal party
Or priests pressing you for pounds and pence
Or the frocks, the bishop’s staff
The dog-collars demarcating You from Me
With Lazarus
No, I believe in Jesus because
He who believed in me believes in you
He who kicked a can down the road
With Lazarus, his mate, the one who died temporarily
I believe in Jesus because he wept
At the tomb - it was not all miracles – and
Over Jerusalem like our mothers’ weep over us
And because he loved Mary
Magdalene
A woman so pained,
So disfigured by her demons
In so much…poo
Then he came and wiped it away…the poo
Her sufferings, her tears
And made her love life and love again
And to linger in the garden
When Jesus outdid Lazarus
And, posing as a gardener
Gave us all
All of us with dirt under our fingernails
A taste of resurrection
Yes, I believe in Jesus
October 7th 2023 Remembrance
October 7th 2023 Hamas murder unarmed Kibbutz and Supernova music festival goers and take 251 hostages, 97 of whom are yet to be returned home. A poem of remembrance.
Not once have I
Been caught in the careful
Eye-beam of a ravenous wolf
Foxes, cunning as ever,
Stand and stare before
The shadows take them
And dogs, tongues lolling,
Trot undangerously
Learning only to love
But it was the pack
That hunted their prey
Eye-to-eye, heart-to-heart
In a murderous pact
Slaying the unguarded
In civilian slaughter
Biden’s shock: photos of
A baby riddled with bullets,
A soldier beheaded
Supernovans burned alive
In cars and hideaways
Trapped in a hatred
A sink hole
In the world’s morality
Legitimacy to govern
Torn to shreds
We weep until
The wolves’ eyes dim
Today we remember
The unforgotten, the 97
Yet to return home
But we will remember
In wrath to remember mercy
We who have been wolves
We, called to be Samaritans,
Let healing come
From unlikely places
Let war be undone like
Untied laces dragging
Along the ground
Singing songs
Of miracle
And wonder
He makes wars cease
He shatters the spear, be still
And know that I am God
Cold, Day 5, 6 a.m.
Day 5 of a flu-like cold. No more need be said. I'm a bloke.
Friday:
Monoclonal
Antibodies launch
An autumn offensive at
The expense of my limp arms
Heavy as I drag myself up the stairs,
Shuffling, sniffling, spluttering, coughing
In search of yet more tissues and an empty bin
Before shutting down under a blanket in the lounge
Now 7.45 a.m. I sleep for an hour, deep dive into nothing
Somehow it works. My eyes feel more like optical instruments
Not banging balls of pain, engaging in the world of fallen leaves
I put a coat on and venture out, aware that matted hair is not
A wholesome sight. Grunt-conversation at the shop is the
Most I can envisage, politely. The autumn offensive is
Underway but victory is a weekend wish. Milk and
Paracetamol packets in hand I scowl inwardly
At the RNA enemy and nod encouragingly
At my lymphocyte army as they engulf
Titchy coronaviruses before they
Hitch yet more rides on my
Ever-unzipping DNA
10.30. Poem
Tea.
Holy Fire
Guy Fawkes Night, on November 5th, often renamed Firework Night , commemorates the Gunpowder Plot, a close shave in 1605 for Parliament when Guy Fakes' plot to blow up Parliament was discovered.. It had been a Catholic plot.
This year, Anna Chegwith
Took hold of organising
Lower Banford’s Guy Fawkes Night
Beyond the boundary
Opposite the oak tree
Far from the pavilion
Anna, Catholic on a Sunday,
Firefighter by Monday,
Had two loves: order and disorder
White-shirt-buttons-neat-Chegwith
And anarchic-Anna, depatterned,
Chaotic, randomly romantic, Anna
Committee-meeting-Chegwith reigned
Precise distances to the rope
Fire station - informed
Weather reports - updated
Decision timelines – strict
Traffic lights on amber
At home, Anna put the word out:
Invite the blind, the deaf, the crippled
The autistic, anosmians, dysgeusians
And ‘Primary children to bring wood’
Written on a to do list, sat on the loo
Flushed before Chegwith could find it
The parents set to compete as ever
Anna subverting Ghegwith
Chegwith suppressing Anna
November the 5th arrives
Dusk is gathering, damp air cooling
A rope is in place, a matrix of fireworks
50 yards downwind from the pyre
Its wigwam of standard tree trunks
Chegwith’s firm foundation
Pressed into the ground by odd offerings
Old tables, bookcases, broken rocking horses
Uprooted trees, an old brown piano
Rising to meet the stars, trembling and creaking.
The crowd now hushed,
Waiting for Anna to kneel, and
Lit taper in hand to ignite the bonfire
A wild conflagration feeds the night sky
Tasted in the air, its roar heard,
The heat so real it could be held
Red raging flames compensating
The disabled, first behind the rope
Guy Fawkes Night, an enhancer, for all ages
Battling with burgers and dripping ketchup.
Yes, it had a guy, a nod to Parliament
And on Sunday Anna Chegwith,
Smelling sweet from the smoke, still,
Knelt again, as we all do before holy fire
PoW
I wanted to write something about the Princess of Wales' video update of her post-chemotherapy recovery. A Haiku with a deliberately ambiguous title emerged.
Like flowing water
Broadcast on our soil of fear
Seeds of courage sown
Written a few days after the Princess of Wales’ broadcast a video update of her post-chemotherapy recovery
Apalachee
Apalache - two teachers and two pupils lie dead after a teenage boy opens fire. A poem that requires little interpretation.
When the grey bullets fly
And life ruptured, stilled, and
Stripped from the living
Joins the unbreathing
Caught in unblinking grief
We all die.
Centuries of constitutional
Misadventure, deep-rooted
A torpor state of mind
A dream that spells
Freedom in another’s blood
Red raw, delusional.
Remove the rifle
Silent words in pleading eyes
What anguish sent a message
Brain to finger to pull?
And in our heart-recoil?
Agony. Mourning. A soft reprisal
Too weak to be heard
But exhaustion will have her way
Jericho walls, stiff with pride
Will loosen, will collapse
Second amendment amended
No longer deferred
Leaning on a hoe
Sometimes it's what isn't happening that catches the eye
The sun, bleary-eyed as I
Barely peering above the horizontal,
Pours down its slow post-dawn light
On a muggy morning, August,
Dew rising, humid and still
The muffled commute underway
Eight men arrayed
In orange jackets and legs
Swap cigarettes and light up
The prelude to an attack
In slow motion on a
Weed-infested dockside kerb
I join the runners old and not so
Immunised against joint pain
With earbuds full of
Marley or Madness
Or, in my case,
Berry, the Black Country poet
The sun rises; the sweat falls
In great drops, my shirt
Monsoon damp, a testimony
To efforts that will not trouble
Or terrify
Any records known to man
The end, and I walk the perimeter
Of Cumberland Basin to cool
At the far end, under the Sun
The same eight in orange
Stand prodding at the enemy
With dedicated timidity
One, leaning on his hoe,
A hoe that mimics
The angle of lazy urination,
Fails to move, fearing defeat,
‘The weeds will win’ it’s
Beneath him to bend
The others shuffle, smoke, and scrape
Towards their first tea break
As I head home
To put the kettle on
And break sweat once again:
Pen in hand
General Synopsis
Woke up this morning to a gale and recycling bins rumbling down the road
Wild, wet, and windy
Coke can rattles down the street
Drunk singing God save the King
Cromarty Forth Tyne
Dogger Fisher German Bight
Thames Humber Dover
Low pressure rising
Riot on the Isle of Wight?
Flag flies at half-mast
Fading in the sun
Union Jack red, white and blue
Coke can, still at last
The Emptying
Kenosis is the Greek word for emptying and a curious image St Paul used to describe Christ who 'emptied himself'
At number 4, grass grew from June to August
The solid oak front door obscuring
Bills unpaid, takeaway vouchers,
And a postcard from the Sun.
The body was well-dressed and mostly absent
A monocle, a mould-infested bow tie
Dark brown shoe polish, can open,
Brush gripped tight in his bent
Rigor mortis fist, bones only.
He’d choked, it would seem
Long-distant family members
Attracted by duty and pecuniary matters
Like flies to the body
Sifted, binned, sold, and removed
Nearly a century of accumulated
Memories needed no more.
Every object passed through
Their executor-digestive system
And eliminated as is the way
Along the legal path
Across the road at number 13
The front lawn is mown regularly
And a new door affixed last week
The old one, also oak, broken up
Stored in the shed,
Ready, one day, to feed the fire-pit
Its red flame energy
To be faced one last time
Its ashes to be taken by the wind
To the wild north
To the wild north
The emptying
A peristalsis of sorrow
An unavoidable appointment
With life in its fulness
A compulsory education
One that Christ knew
Emptying Himself
Of all that got in the way
Of Him touching rotten flesh
Or healing the broken-hearted
Slack Jaw at War
East meaning East London, ‘Ackney a little short of Hackney, hear the accent and mourn the disappearing distinction between vowels
‘Ackney Slack Jaw
That’s my name
Not black no blame
I’m a white rhyming jackdaw
Not wild, not tame
Some rules in East
Don’t look at me in my eyes
Stay lowly, be cool as ice
Not hostile, I don’t smile
Safe with me, not deceased
No conformity, no truce
I flatten my vowels
Let my jaw hang loose
My I, so sly
My words so smooth
No conformity, no truce
I carry a grammar hammer
Your e’s and your a’s
Rebuilt in Slack Jaw ways
Your o’s and your u’s
No stranger to abuse
I carry a grammar hammer
I’m a white rhyming jackdaw
Not wild, not tame
Not black, no blame
‘Ackney Slack Jaw
That’s my name
Friday’s Irregular Poetry Corner: The Song of the Bow
Israel…Gaza…lament
I woke up this morning aware at some point that I didn’t have a poem to share for Friday’s Irregular Poetry Corner. That’s OK as it has always wanted to live up to its name – Irregular.
So, to my breakfast routine: Malted wheats + homemade muesli + cuppa tea, milk no sugar, and a bible reading. This morning’s reading was 2 Samuel chapter 1 which includes David’s lament, The Song of the Bow, a poem, a pouring out of grief over the death of King Saul and his son Jonathan in battle.
I offer selected verses from The Song of the Bow in the form of tercets. The phrase How the Mighty have Fallen is often attributed to Shakespeare or Churchill but borrowed, in fact, from David shortly before he became King David.
The battle has extraordinary resonance today. The Philistines, victorious in this battle with Israel in which their archers wounded Saul and Jonathan, occupied the same region we know today as the Gaza Strip: the ancient rivalry continues.
Maybe let this poem open our ears to hear the laments poured out by Jews and Gazans as the days of suffering continue nearly 10 months after the despicable attack against unarmed Jews by Hamas in October 2023 and the hostages taken.
The Song of the Bow
The beauty of Israel is slain on your high places
How the mighty have fallen
Tell it not in Gath
O mountains of Gilboa
Let there be no dew nor rain upon you
For the shield of the mighty is defiled
Saul and Jonathan were beloved and pleasant in their lives
And in their death they were not divided
They were swifter than eagles and stronger than lions
O daughters of Israel, weep over Saul
Who clothed you in scarlet with luxury
Who put ornaments of gold on your apparel
How the mighty have fallen in the midst of battle
I am distressed for you, my brother, Jonathan
Your love to me…surpassing the love of women
How the mighty have fallen
And the weapons of war
Perished!
In some unknown way, a lament can do what victory and/or defeat in battle cannot. There is an unseen limit to suffering, a Stop sign, and a lament is a prelude, I suggest, to the deep cry of Enough! uttered in the final seconds before peace reigns.
Guest poet: Harry Baker - Impossible
Guest poet: Harry Baker…a real wordsmith
Impossible - by Harry Baker
Thank You
A thank you letter? Certainly a thank you poem
Descending from Tryfan
In an early morning autumnal mist
Three nights of hill-bound
Body odour to prove our ordeal
The welcome end in sight
And my joy is eclipsed
By sudden uncalled-for
Patella pain
A decade passes
And I, unable to run
And reduced often to
Less than a child’s pace
A young man no longer young
Stoic I, sad at heart
But head held high
Push on with private prayers
After-dawn rituals continue
There’s cereal, toast, tea
Bible readings, and tie-tying
All with variable success
A pre-work regularity but
Interrupted on this day
By one unbidden word:
‘Run!’
A command from Beyond
Authoritative, inescapable
Unharsh, inaudible
More than a word
So, crippled I
Locate my battered trainers
Old from lack of use
And find a gravel path
And obey, for a quarter of a mile
Then a mile the next day
Half-marathons follow on
Patella pain consigned
To the past
I run now on new fuel
Offerings of thanksgiving
To the One
Who interrupted my prayers
And made me an
Implausible parable
On two legs:
Therefore strengthen the hands
That hang down
And the feeble knees
And make straight paths for your feet
So that what is lame
May not be dislocated
But rather be healed…
…let us run the race
Still small voice
A day spent on Beer beach…
Beer beach. Almost July.
Even with the sun skulking
Behind lumpy grey clouds
And an onshore breeze
To cool the pebbles
It is warm enough
Warm enough to sit,
Read, remove a layer
And later, sandals on
Wander over to the beach café
For a flat white and a brie
And cranberry panini
Lunch, and to listen
Until time itself disappears
And the world of thoughts
Recedes
And some aural centre
Draws you in
Not gravity, not to-do lists
Not worries, nor plans
Neither angels nor demons
Only the sound of the beach
Filling all, upholding all, as if
One can swim at any depth
Suspended inside sound:
Breaking waves crashing
Like thousands of crisps
Trodden underfoot
Forlorn seagulls crying
Searching for scraps
An irritating Pekinese angry
In its over-stretched skin
Hull grunts of a fishing smack
Hauled over the pebbles
And much silence, the silence
Of an uncrowded beach
Into which I hear
All I need to hear
Summer?
Inspired in part by a Victor Meldrew moment…the unnecessary and irritating music played during service changes at Queens. Why? There is no satisfactory answer…so it’s out with the poetic pen
It’s a temporary fixture
Like one-summer ants
Accelerators down
Scampering around on
Sun-scorched paving slabs
All to collect a leaf,
And march triumphant
Before death,
Hoisting their green flags
It’s burning beach sand
Underfeet furnaces
Making flamenco dancers
Of even the most reserved
A staccato dancing
Desperate hunt for cool
Blades of green grass
Before the sand chills
So fast at the sunset hour
It’s inane music
Filling the void
No one permitted to dip,
Or speak of life in the raw,
Or grief-stricken hearts, but
We weep with those whose
Suntans are for next year
Before the sounds of
Our final goodbyes dissipate
It’s for removing shirts
Flouting flesh-covering rules
It’s beach cricket. Intense.
Annual family contests
Fiercely fought, bat and ball,
Battling like warring hippos,
Unto death…well, loss anyway
Before stumps are drawn
Chilled beers are sunk
And we carry one another
Across lengthening shadows
Juggling with water
Juggling with water was an image that occurred to me quite randomly…all I’ve tried to do is wrap some words around the phrase. I hope you like the poem, maybe it’ll strike a chord
In a dream as a child,
Creeping downstairs
In the dark, I sat
Composed, adjusting the
Ragged piano stool
And played Rachmaninov’s
2nd piano concerto in C minor
Faultlessly
Each finger and note
Plunging into an infinite pool
Of untrammelled light
It was so vivid
A copy of a reality
Evading this conscious realm
Early in the morning I followed
My dream to the same stool
But my fingers turned to butter
And the notes and chords
Evaporated never to return
Like a juggler whose sticks
Had turned to water
I sighed
And now? Years piled upon years?
Here I am. And there you are.
Do we prefer the dream world
Of realised hopes, like miracles
Grace-gifts from elsewhere?
Or,
Do we reconcile ourselves
To the world of cuts and bruises
Of hoped-for solidity
Slipping through our fingers
Like water into sand?
Jazz-jamming bum notes flow on,
Unashamed stepping stones
On the subject of water,
I stumbled across
An unlooked-for treasure
Tucked away in an ancient psalm
You keep my tears in a bottle
You have recorded each one
In Your book
Now? Now, with eyes closed
Jazz-jamming bum notes flow on,
Unashamed stepping stones
Sounding like spring rain
Jumping from the sea wall
I was asked to write a poem about courage…my offering…more about a lack of courag
I think I was four
When my tongue wrapped itself
Round a new word:
Subtract
It may, of course, have been
Take away, or minus
But I added it to my arsenal
Of ideas of having less
At four, I knew
I had less height, less strength
Less girth, less stamina
Than the grown-ups
The urge to close the gap
A burning fire: how oddly
We strive for the things
That will overtake us
But even at four, or five, or six
Our secret comparisons
Invisible and inward,
Bristle with life:
Elizabeth is beautiful
Somehow Carol is not
Love, added and subtracted
Rushes in like the tide, and away
My friend, arms raised, yelling
Jumped off the sea wall
Into the waves…I held back
Washington never lied…but I?
Whoever dealt the cards
Gave some to all, not all to one
What we lack others have
That’s the arithmetic
Freely you have received
Freely give
Oh! this somersaulting universe
Under a tutelage of grace!
Having less is a baptism,
A plunging into a vast ocean
I lack courage…but only in me
It comes as a gift…to share
Not Just Mud - a trilogy
A trilogy about mud…more than mud in fact. The first poem was published in Wheelsong Poetry Anthology 4 for Save the Children
Not just mud i
It all started with pulling my
Fingers free from the mud
Abandoned at low-tide
Dark, tacky, sweet-smelling
Mud to sink toes and feet in
But at my age then,
I wanted to be a crab
So, immersing toes and fingers
Side-slipping, I chased the
Outgoing tide until…
…it was the sight of a
Real, live, salty red crab
That stopped me:
Curiosity pulled at my fingers
Until, with a thwook,
Out of the mud they came
I took hold of the hard edges
Of the crab’s crusty shell
And let its flailing legs
Make patterns in the mud-ripples
Before baptising it
In a pool and letting it
Get clean away, then it was back
To plunging my fingers in then out
I wondered even then:
What could I make with mud?
Mud: the impotent left-overs
The detritus of decay
Washed here and there
By forces too strong to resist
Wind, tidal surges, estuary madness
Mud: weak, wet, and worthless
But my fingers went to work
First a handful, squeezed
Until the sea stopped draining free
I looked at the grey-brown sphere
Formed between my palms until
It was a scoop of ice cream…
Next? Something like a cone
Squeezed and rolled, emerged
It all ended with Mother
Picking me up
Mud still in my hands
And between my toes until
I was bath-baptised and got
Clean away…to bed, dreaming
Of mud-men and mud-women
Majestic and mighty
Not just mud ii
The years passed by
And mud had turned to clay
And clay had turned to stone
And the stone had turned
Into sculptures
Of tall men and tall women
Striding across long grass
Leaving behind an evolution
If not an evolution
Then a metamorphosis
My gnarly fingers
And swollen joints testifying
Of a lifetime sculpting
Making a fading dream
Become impervious
A vision taking on solid forms
Of a people, a stone race
Of magnificence rising up
From all that’s unseen
Beneath the soles
Of our shoes. Sixty years it took
Before halted again,
Not by a crab but
At my god-likeness
Not just mud iii
My brother was a doctor
My sister a warrior
In low moments I thought
I had wasted my life-clock
Felt like grey-brown mud
Squeezed dry by the world
Just a scoop of nothing much
A sculptor barely scraping by
It was not a voice I heard
But something
Not an angelic visitation
But each cell of my body
Began to exult - I saw
The loving hand of God
Reaching down into the poor
And broken mud-people we are
And yielding, if we will, to the
Divine finger-moulding-pressing
We rise, like wet clay on a wheel
Into the mud-men, and
The mud-women
Of a four-year-old’s dream
The weak, wet, and worthless
Now tall, mighty, and magnificent
Nazareth, Israel
Imagine sitting across the table from Jesus…in today’s Nazareth
2022 census
Pop: 78,000
The inhabitants are predominantly Arab citizens of Israel,
of whom 69% are Muslim Arabs and 31% Christian Arabs
Shall I explore Nazareth?
Travel there will bleed £300
From my bank account
But barely nine hours later
And I’d be eating falafels
At Bayat’s, outside, soaking
In the late afternoon sun
But like the two disciples
On the road to Emmaus,
Nine hours elapsing
After the resurrection,
Imagine, if you will,
Sitting across from me, Jesus,
Asking for more hummus
Our meal washed down with
Cups of Baladi, orangey tea
Or a glass of Shafaya
Blood red wine from Galilee
And he asks me:
Can you make wine
Without crushing the grapes?
My eyes meet his
There’s a cool breeze
To alleviate the afternoon heat
But I look at this man
If that is what he is
He stands up, smiles
A tear in his eye, and is gone
I look around with his eyes
My ears growing accustomed
To the poetic cadence
Of Arabic and Hebrew tongues
I wonder if he, so unwelcome
Once, at the synagogue,
Was sitting easily or uneasily?
Are they ready for you in Nazareth?
It seemed his one question
Spawned more questions in me
Rather than answering his with a No.
Are they ready for the wine
Or would they crush you once more?
Is that why you left?
But his smile more than
The tear has not left me
He sat down at my table
And, later when I went to pay
The restaurant owner said
‘Bill paid. By your friend’.
Slowly, I closed my wallet
And left, knowing he is ready
Ready to welcome those
Who are unwelcome
Displaced Palestinians
Ejected from house and home
Post-holocaust Jews
Diasporans in their own land
Can my heart be so hard
To leave him outside myself
Standing in the Bristol rain?
No. Now I understand
It took a crushing, not just
A bill paid by a stranger
To savour the new wine.
______________________________________________________
Luke 4
He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:
“The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind
to set the oppressed free,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.”
Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him. He began by saying to them, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”
“Truly I tell you,” he continued, “no prophet is accepted in his hometown”.
All the people in the synagogue were furious when they heard this. They drove him out, and took him to the brow of the hill on which the town was built, to throw him off the cliff. But he walked right through the crowd and went on his way.