XLIV
The vermilion globe of the sun -
An oily golden sea
Embraced by arms of concrete
No longer wild and free.
A gentle swell enhances
The fiery death of the sun
With delicate pastel colours
The evening show has begun.
The heavens are evenly banded -
Light lemon, pale peach, blush pink.
The sky's light blue background
Is tinted with coloured ink.
The colours deepen and darken
The sky turns indigo blue
With a diamond flash in the gathering gloom
Sirius sparks into view.
Tropical sunsets are brief -
All too soon darkness falls.
There's another performance tomorrow
Make sure of your seat in the stalls.
Cuffe Parade, Colaba.
This stage is now occupied by tower blocks.
To RJM and WM
February 1988
Wednesday, 6 April 2011
Tuesday, 5 April 2011
VICTORIAN VALUES
XLIII
We all know the Victorian values
Of economy, hard work and thrift.
Endeavour and achievement were greatly admred
And shirkers were given short shrift.
Victorians were upright and God fearing
So many savage souls they "saved"
Young men were bravely patriotic -
Young girls chastely behaved.
So what did they do with their rebels?
Their young folk who would not conform?
They buried them in large asylums
And forgot that they'd ever been born.
Beneath the Victorian icing
Of piety and charity-giving
Lurked hypocritical double syandards
And some very immoral living.
To Dora and Horace
9.7.1988
We all know the Victorian values
Of economy, hard work and thrift.
Endeavour and achievement were greatly admred
And shirkers were given short shrift.
Victorians were upright and God fearing
So many savage souls they "saved"
Young men were bravely patriotic -
Young girls chastely behaved.
So what did they do with their rebels?
Their young folk who would not conform?
They buried them in large asylums
And forgot that they'd ever been born.
Beneath the Victorian icing
Of piety and charity-giving
Lurked hypocritical double syandards
And some very immoral living.
To Dora and Horace
9.7.1988
FEMININE RESTRAINTS
XLII
Right through our civilization
Irrespective of time and race
Women have always sought to
Alter their figure and face.
The feet of upper class Chinese girls
Were bound from a tender age.
They could only hobble painfully
Around the marriage stage.
The giraffe women of Africa
With their long metal-ringed necks
Look unnaturally elegant - but
Their vertebrae must be wrecks.
There are other female mutilations
Too painful to mention.
Keeping a girl pure for marriage
Was the official intention.
To get her daughter firmly corsetted
The good Victorian mother made haste;
For who would marry a well bred girl
With more than a 20" waist?
Never mind if her rib-cage was deformed
Or if she tended to faint.
Victorian ladies suffered for beauty -
Moved gracefully because of restraint.
Men like women shackled and suppressed -
So some feminists claim,
But looking at current fashions
I don't think that men are to blame.
As we enter the 21st century
Women are liberated - and free,
But perhaps girls want a reason
For not being able to flee.
Why else would they wear restricting skirts
And such dangerously high heels.
They look extremely uncomfortable -
I wonder how it feels.
But before we get too critical
About what today's young girls wear,
We should recall the sixties -
Mini skirts - stilettos - armoured hair.
A peacock's large unwieldy tail
To show off his strength is essential
Do girls wear such high-heeled shoes
To prove their breeding potential?
July 2000
Right through our civilization
Irrespective of time and race
Women have always sought to
Alter their figure and face.
The feet of upper class Chinese girls
Were bound from a tender age.
They could only hobble painfully
Around the marriage stage.
The giraffe women of Africa
With their long metal-ringed necks
Look unnaturally elegant - but
Their vertebrae must be wrecks.
There are other female mutilations
Too painful to mention.
Keeping a girl pure for marriage
Was the official intention.
To get her daughter firmly corsetted
The good Victorian mother made haste;
For who would marry a well bred girl
With more than a 20" waist?
Never mind if her rib-cage was deformed
Or if she tended to faint.
Victorian ladies suffered for beauty -
Moved gracefully because of restraint.
Men like women shackled and suppressed -
So some feminists claim,
But looking at current fashions
I don't think that men are to blame.
As we enter the 21st century
Women are liberated - and free,
But perhaps girls want a reason
For not being able to flee.
Why else would they wear restricting skirts
And such dangerously high heels.
They look extremely uncomfortable -
I wonder how it feels.
But before we get too critical
About what today's young girls wear,
We should recall the sixties -
Mini skirts - stilettos - armoured hair.
A peacock's large unwieldy tail
To show off his strength is essential
Do girls wear such high-heeled shoes
To prove their breeding potential?
July 2000
Monday, 4 April 2011
A MAY VISIT TO BOMBAY
XLI
A summer visit to Bombay
Is a hot and steamy event
85 deg. at sunrise
With humidity at 90%
It's said that ladies glow,
Men perspire and horses sweat,
But it's hard to feel ladylike
When you're wringing wet...
And the "glow" is running
Down your back and chest,
The heat saps your energy
And robs you of your zest.
Dewy beads of moisture
Form upon your face,
They link up with their neighbours
And together they race ...
Down your cheek and neck
Like a little rivulet
A tiny tumbling stream
Of swiftly flowing sweat.
Every cloud has a silver lining
So it is with Bombay's heat
As a smoother-out of wrinkles
The climate is hard to beat.
Fruit and flowers are compensations,
And though I feel a sodden wreck,
I can't remember when I last had
Such a smooth and unlined neck!
30,5,92
Written at Sahar Airport - the airconditioning had failed
and there were no fans. Making up this verse helped
pass a long uncomfortable night.
A summer visit to Bombay
Is a hot and steamy event
85 deg. at sunrise
With humidity at 90%
It's said that ladies glow,
Men perspire and horses sweat,
But it's hard to feel ladylike
When you're wringing wet...
And the "glow" is running
Down your back and chest,
The heat saps your energy
And robs you of your zest.
Dewy beads of moisture
Form upon your face,
They link up with their neighbours
And together they race ...
Down your cheek and neck
Like a little rivulet
A tiny tumbling stream
Of swiftly flowing sweat.
Every cloud has a silver lining
So it is with Bombay's heat
As a smoother-out of wrinkles
The climate is hard to beat.
Fruit and flowers are compensations,
And though I feel a sodden wreck,
I can't remember when I last had
Such a smooth and unlined neck!
30,5,92
Written at Sahar Airport - the airconditioning had failed
and there were no fans. Making up this verse helped
pass a long uncomfortable night.
YOUTH IS WASTED ON THE YOUNG
XL
The young take health for granted
And don't appreciate
Muscles that do not tire
And joints that do not ache.
They do not even know they have
Blood pressure or a heart,
Their bodies do just what they should -
Every single part.
To perfect sight and hearing
They never give a thought -
And know that their digestion
Will act just as it ought.
They don't realise how lucky they are
To just pick up a paper and read
Without the search for glasses
That we mature folk need.
Their hair is bright and glossy,
Their skin unlined and clear,
Although a tiny little spot
Occasionally may appear.
Youngsters are not grateful for
Fitness in limb and lung.
Isn't it a pity youth
Is wasted on the young.
Revised 1995
The young take health for granted
And don't appreciate
Muscles that do not tire
And joints that do not ache.
They do not even know they have
Blood pressure or a heart,
Their bodies do just what they should -
Every single part.
To perfect sight and hearing
They never give a thought -
And know that their digestion
Will act just as it ought.
They don't realise how lucky they are
To just pick up a paper and read
Without the search for glasses
That we mature folk need.
Their hair is bright and glossy,
Their skin unlined and clear,
Although a tiny little spot
Occasionally may appear.
Youngsters are not grateful for
Fitness in limb and lung.
Isn't it a pity youth
Is wasted on the young.
Revised 1995
Friday, 1 April 2011
BANKING IN THE COMPUTER AGE
XXXIX
In these days of instant communication
Why on earth does it take so long
To clear a cheque through the system
Where do they go so wrong?
Messages fly round the world in seconds
In minutes you can contact Mars -
Jupiter takes a little longer and
Saturn - perhaps a couple of hours.
Thanks to the Hubble telescope
We can see solar systems form
Study the remains of supernovas
And watch galaxies being born.
We can receive radio signals
From far distant neutron stars
And there has been mention of
Greening and colonizing Mars.
We can put astronauts in orbit
Or send them up to fix a faulty fuse
While monitoring on a video
The health and well-being of crews.
We have a reasonable postal service
Web sites on the internet,
Satellite telecommunications -
Faxes, E-mails - and yet...
IT CAN STILL TAKE SEVEN DAYS TO CLEAR A CHEQUE
Written in 1997 - and has anything changed?
In these days of instant communication
Why on earth does it take so long
To clear a cheque through the system
Where do they go so wrong?
Messages fly round the world in seconds
In minutes you can contact Mars -
Jupiter takes a little longer and
Saturn - perhaps a couple of hours.
Thanks to the Hubble telescope
We can see solar systems form
Study the remains of supernovas
And watch galaxies being born.
We can receive radio signals
From far distant neutron stars
And there has been mention of
Greening and colonizing Mars.
We can put astronauts in orbit
Or send them up to fix a faulty fuse
While monitoring on a video
The health and well-being of crews.
We have a reasonable postal service
Web sites on the internet,
Satellite telecommunications -
Faxes, E-mails - and yet...
IT CAN STILL TAKE SEVEN DAYS TO CLEAR A CHEQUE
Written in 1997 - and has anything changed?
Thursday, 31 March 2011
SPRING HAS SPRUNG
XXXVIII
Spring has come to the larder
The potatoes are starting to sprout
And every fat little garlic clove
Has a slim green shoot coming out.
Spring has come to the countryside
It's pink and white blossom time
And every breath of spring-fresh air
Is a sip of sparkling white wine.
Spring has come to the garden
The slugs are beginning to stir
And all over my cabbage plants
Holes now start to appear.
Spring has come to housework
As the light grows stronger
Dust and cobwebs show up more
And I can ignore them no longer.
March 1981
Spring has come to the larder
The potatoes are starting to sprout
And every fat little garlic clove
Has a slim green shoot coming out.
Spring has come to the countryside
It's pink and white blossom time
And every breath of spring-fresh air
Is a sip of sparkling white wine.
Spring has come to the garden
The slugs are beginning to stir
And all over my cabbage plants
Holes now start to appear.
Spring has come to housework
As the light grows stronger
Dust and cobwebs show up more
And I can ignore them no longer.
March 1981
M STANDS FOR MOTORWAY MADNESS
XXXVII
M stands for the maniac
On our motorway
Where drivers have to dice with death
Every single day.
M is for the madness
That invades their mind
As they drive along the M25
Leaving courtesy behind.
M stands for the music
Which must be turned up high
To block out every other sound
Of traffic passing by.
M is for the macho man
Who thinks he has the right
To drive at a hundred miles an hour
|Overtaking all in sight.
M is for the mayhem caused
By driving nose to tail.
Warnings are issued every year
But to no avail.
Maturity and moderation
Also start with M
What a pity that we do not
See some more of them.
September 1988
Wednesday, 30 March 2011
HELPLESS FEMALES
XXXVI
Are women really the weaker sex?
Our Regency sisters were smart,
They seemed so frail and fragile -
Their helplessness was an art.
They were shielded from all worries
Anxiety made them faint.
They were as pure as driven snow -
Like a madonna or saint.
No heavy bags could they carry
Just a parasol and muff.
A small reticule and 'kerchief -
They were more than enough.
A couple of centuries later
We have women's lib.
Not for us a home-bound life
Of merely kitchen and crib.
We can have a career and
Employers must not discriminate
But after a busy day at work
When we get home late ...
There's cooking and cleaning
Shopping and laundry too.
Oh to be a helpless female
With absolutely nothing to do.
August 1988
Are women really the weaker sex?
Our Regency sisters were smart,
They seemed so frail and fragile -
Their helplessness was an art.
They were shielded from all worries
Anxiety made them faint.
They were as pure as driven snow -
Like a madonna or saint.
No heavy bags could they carry
Just a parasol and muff.
A small reticule and 'kerchief -
They were more than enough.
A couple of centuries later
We have women's lib.
Not for us a home-bound life
Of merely kitchen and crib.
We can have a career and
Employers must not discriminate
But after a busy day at work
When we get home late ...
There's cooking and cleaning
Shopping and laundry too.
Oh to be a helpless female
With absolutely nothing to do.
August 1988
SUMMER SACRIFICES
XXV
All through the summer months
Sacrifices are made
To the ancient weather gods
Asking for their aid.
Our altars we call "barbecues"
They come in many sizes
And from these votive offering sites
A pall of thick smoke rises.
We don't sacrifice live creatures
We're too civilised for that -
We buy expensive cuts of meat
And burn them sooty black.
The smoke gets in our eyes
There are midges in our hair-
But we must do our duty
In the chilly evening air.
If it should be raining
We hold it just the same,
Meths. and an umbrella aid
The sacrificial flame.
After we have eaten
Our blackened piece of meat
We hope the gods will grant us
Fine weather all next week.
Tewkesbury -
To Eunice
1.8.1989
All through the summer months
Sacrifices are made
To the ancient weather gods
Asking for their aid.
Our altars we call "barbecues"
They come in many sizes
And from these votive offering sites
A pall of thick smoke rises.
We don't sacrifice live creatures
We're too civilised for that -
We buy expensive cuts of meat
And burn them sooty black.
The smoke gets in our eyes
There are midges in our hair-
But we must do our duty
In the chilly evening air.
If it should be raining
We hold it just the same,
Meths. and an umbrella aid
The sacrificial flame.
After we have eaten
Our blackened piece of meat
We hope the gods will grant us
Fine weather all next week.
Tewkesbury -
To Eunice
1.8.1989
LIFE IN INDIA IS NEVER DULL
XXXIV
When I return from |India
Life in England seems predictable and dull
In India, pandemonium and chaos often reign
With an occasional and temporary lull.
There's always a frisson of uncertainty -
Will we have a power cut today?
Will the lights suddenly dim and flicker
And then comletely fade away?
Then there's the problem of water
That we live with throughout the year.
A waterless house full of people
Is an ever-present fear.
All these little uncertainties
Keep us in India on our toes
The euphoria of plenty of water
No complacent Western housewife knows.
Western worries are more complex
What could happen in the world - and might.
In India our problems are more basic:
Will we have any water and light?
On my regular and frequent visits to Bombay I stayed in our old family home.
Wadia House, Colaba had plenty of character, but cronic water shortage.
2.2.1995
When I return from |India
Life in England seems predictable and dull
In India, pandemonium and chaos often reign
With an occasional and temporary lull.
There's always a frisson of uncertainty -
Will we have a power cut today?
Will the lights suddenly dim and flicker
And then comletely fade away?
Then there's the problem of water
That we live with throughout the year.
A waterless house full of people
Is an ever-present fear.
All these little uncertainties
Keep us in India on our toes
The euphoria of plenty of water
No complacent Western housewife knows.
Western worries are more complex
What could happen in the world - and might.
In India our problems are more basic:
Will we have any water and light?
On my regular and frequent visits to Bombay I stayed in our old family home.
Wadia House, Colaba had plenty of character, but cronic water shortage.
2.2.1995
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
ALLOTMENT GYM
XXXIII
I received an invitation
To join a brand new gym -
They promised me firm muscles
And a body toned and trim.
To become a proper member
You need considerable wealth;
But no matter - who can put
A price upon good health.
This was a high-tech gym
With gizmos and gadgets galore
And a personal trainer
To motivate and re-assure.
I tried a standard work-out
But realised very soon
That I had never spent
A more boring afternoon.
All I had to show
For a tedious hour or two
Was the return of an old ache
Plus one that was brand new.
So I took on a 10-rod allotment
And found to my surprise
That it provided every possible
Type of exercise.
Digging is a great workout
Though muscles might feel sore;
For the cardiovascular system
Try shovelling barrows of manure.
It provides fresh air and friendship
And after all your toil
At least you are rewarded
By something from the soil.
January 2007
I received an invitation
To join a brand new gym -
They promised me firm muscles
And a body toned and trim.
To become a proper member
You need considerable wealth;
But no matter - who can put
A price upon good health.
This was a high-tech gym
With gizmos and gadgets galore
And a personal trainer
To motivate and re-assure.
I tried a standard work-out
But realised very soon
That I had never spent
A more boring afternoon.
All I had to show
For a tedious hour or two
Was the return of an old ache
Plus one that was brand new.
So I took on a 10-rod allotment
And found to my surprise
That it provided every possible
Type of exercise.
Digging is a great workout
Though muscles might feel sore;
For the cardiovascular system
Try shovelling barrows of manure.
It provides fresh air and friendship
And after all your toil
At least you are rewarded
By something from the soil.
January 2007
HANDEL'S CURSE - WHERE'ER YOU WALK
XXXII
To everyone who has ever sung the Handel song:
Where'er you walk, cool gales shall fan the glade,
Trees where you sit shall crowd into a shade,......
Where'er you sit, the blushing flowers shall rise,
And all things flourish ...where'er you turn your eyes.
On a recent country walk
I saw a calm, sunny glade,
The warm still air was flower scented
A babbling brook gently played.
But as I stopped and stood there
Enjoying the quiet peaceful scene
Chilly gusting winds sprang up
"Cool gales" is what I mean.
I gathered my things together
And left the breezy dell -
Instantly the wild winds dropped
And still calm silence fell.
Then I saw a grassy bank
And sat down in the sun
But the trees all crowded over me
One by one - by one.
As I trod the cool green paths
The blushing flowers did rise -
Brambles and dog roses bloomed
Before my startled eyes.
Where'er I looked plants flourished
Dandelions - nettles - dock,
Bind weed and sturdy thistles
My stocking-ed legs to mock.
Then I realised what had happened
I'd been cursed by Handel's song.
I'm sure he meant it kindly
But he was very wrong.
Was his love an independent lady
Who liked doing things on her own?
Perhaps the song was to discourage her
From wandering in the forest all alone.
Summer 2002
To everyone who has ever sung the Handel song:
Where'er you walk, cool gales shall fan the glade,
Trees where you sit shall crowd into a shade,......
Where'er you sit, the blushing flowers shall rise,
And all things flourish ...where'er you turn your eyes.
On a recent country walk
I saw a calm, sunny glade,
The warm still air was flower scented
A babbling brook gently played.
But as I stopped and stood there
Enjoying the quiet peaceful scene
Chilly gusting winds sprang up
"Cool gales" is what I mean.
I gathered my things together
And left the breezy dell -
Instantly the wild winds dropped
And still calm silence fell.
Then I saw a grassy bank
And sat down in the sun
But the trees all crowded over me
One by one - by one.
As I trod the cool green paths
The blushing flowers did rise -
Brambles and dog roses bloomed
Before my startled eyes.
Where'er I looked plants flourished
Dandelions - nettles - dock,
Bind weed and sturdy thistles
My stocking-ed legs to mock.
Then I realised what had happened
I'd been cursed by Handel's song.
I'm sure he meant it kindly
But he was very wrong.
Was his love an independent lady
Who liked doing things on her own?
Perhaps the song was to discourage her
From wandering in the forest all alone.
Summer 2002
Monday, 28 March 2011
THE M25 - RIBBON OF NOISE
XXXI
The notorious London ring road,
The dreaded M.25
Mutilates our landscape -
Destroys our countryside.
It cuts a noisy swathe
Of chaos and pollution
Posing problems which have no
Satisfactory solution.
Where wild birds used to sing
And wild flowers used to grow
Massive lorries thunder past
And filthy exhausts blow.
The noise is always with us -
On opening our front door
The distant muffled raging
Becomes a furious roar.
The festering, spreading wound
Now is ten lanes wide
An ever growing cancer
On Surrey's countryside.
The double-glazing salesmen
Have watched their profits soar
Though nothing really cuts out
That mind-destroying roar.
When the non-stop traffic
Makes me want to scream
I tell myself it's a waterfall -
Or a rocky mountain stream.
In no way does this deception
Lessen the noise,
But instead of driving me insane
It merely annoys.
The M25 started as 6 lanes, widened to 8
and then to 10.
Oct.1989
Revised 2011
The notorious London ring road,
The dreaded M.25
Mutilates our landscape -
Destroys our countryside.
It cuts a noisy swathe
Of chaos and pollution
Posing problems which have no
Satisfactory solution.
Where wild birds used to sing
And wild flowers used to grow
Massive lorries thunder past
And filthy exhausts blow.
The noise is always with us -
On opening our front door
The distant muffled raging
Becomes a furious roar.
The festering, spreading wound
Now is ten lanes wide
An ever growing cancer
On Surrey's countryside.
The double-glazing salesmen
Have watched their profits soar
Though nothing really cuts out
That mind-destroying roar.
When the non-stop traffic
Makes me want to scream
I tell myself it's a waterfall -
Or a rocky mountain stream.
In no way does this deception
Lessen the noise,
But instead of driving me insane
It merely annoys.
The M25 started as 6 lanes, widened to 8
and then to 10.
Oct.1989
Revised 2011
Sunday, 27 March 2011
THE JOYS OF SAILING
XXX
"Sailing is such fun" they said
"You really ought to try it".
So when we saw a boat for sail
We knew we had to buy it.
We had to find a trailer too
And fix the car for towing,
We couldn't wait to sail our boat -
Much more fun than rowing.
We crawled along in a traffic jam
Roadworks of course,
When my map reading faltered
I heard mention of divorce.
At last we reached the lake -
Unhitched the boat from the car,
It took an age to rig it,
With sail and sheet and spar.
By the time we'd finished,
the brisk breeze had abated,
After hours of perfect calm
We knew our trip was fated.
We tried again next morning,
By the time we were through
The wind had greatly freshened
And at a steady Force 9 blew.
The happened time and time again
For the man hours that we spent
I'm sure it would be cheaper
A brand new yacht to rent.
At least now I know what
His next birthday gift will be
A 500 h.p. out-board
To end this misery!
To P.
Summer 1994
"Sailing is such fun" they said
"You really ought to try it".
So when we saw a boat for sail
We knew we had to buy it.
We had to find a trailer too
And fix the car for towing,
We couldn't wait to sail our boat -
Much more fun than rowing.
We crawled along in a traffic jam
Roadworks of course,
When my map reading faltered
I heard mention of divorce.
At last we reached the lake -
Unhitched the boat from the car,
It took an age to rig it,
With sail and sheet and spar.
By the time we'd finished,
the brisk breeze had abated,
After hours of perfect calm
We knew our trip was fated.
We tried again next morning,
By the time we were through
The wind had greatly freshened
And at a steady Force 9 blew.
The happened time and time again
For the man hours that we spent
I'm sure it would be cheaper
A brand new yacht to rent.
At least now I know what
His next birthday gift will be
A 500 h.p. out-board
To end this misery!
To P.
Summer 1994
Friday, 25 March 2011
FRANCE - SHE IS A LOVELY COUNTRY .......
XXIX
FRANCE - SHE IS A LOVELY COUNTRY AND
THE LANGUAGE - HE IS HANDSOME TOO.
As '92 draws nearer
I thought that I should
Try to learn to speak some French
So that I would ...
Be able to communicate
With our friends across La Manche,
For we're all Europeans,
Just a different branch.
French is a complicated language
Our "the" could be "le", "la" or "les"
And unless you know the sex of a thing
There is nothing you can say.
French verbs have always been a nightmare,
At school we learnt them all by heart,
But when you really need them
All your knowledge will depart.
Even when the French speak broken English
And split infinitives 'till they shriek,
They always sound romantic and seductive,
It's a pleasure to listen to them speak.
With my stiff and wooden tongue
How galling it must be
For the French to hear their lovely language
Mangled by the likes of me.
To Francine
11.12.1990
(Closer EU ties were obviously due
in the year of 1992)
FRANCE - SHE IS A LOVELY COUNTRY AND
THE LANGUAGE - HE IS HANDSOME TOO.
As '92 draws nearer
I thought that I should
Try to learn to speak some French
So that I would ...
Be able to communicate
With our friends across La Manche,
For we're all Europeans,
Just a different branch.
French is a complicated language
Our "the" could be "le", "la" or "les"
And unless you know the sex of a thing
There is nothing you can say.
French verbs have always been a nightmare,
At school we learnt them all by heart,
But when you really need them
All your knowledge will depart.
Even when the French speak broken English
And split infinitives 'till they shriek,
They always sound romantic and seductive,
It's a pleasure to listen to them speak.
With my stiff and wooden tongue
How galling it must be
For the French to hear their lovely language
Mangled by the likes of me.
To Francine
11.12.1990
(Closer EU ties were obviously due
in the year of 1992)
Thursday, 24 March 2011
THE TYRANNY OF THE RASPBERRY PATCH
XXVIII
I thought emotional blackmail was for humans
Someone's attention to retain,
But that was before I discovered
The tyranny of the raspberry cane.
I feed and weed and monsters
When the experts say I should
But now that summer is here
And the weather is really good ...
It's difficult to go out
And ignore the plaintive sight
Of redly clustered berries
Free from pests and blight.
There is sorrow and silent reproach
In each red compound eye.
I avert my gaze and steal past
But hear a heartfelt sigh ...
Of raspberry rejection
And it breaks my heart
To spurn their ripe surrender
To cream - or flan - or tart.
But I did spend four hours yesterday
And five the day before
Picking and picking and picking
'Till my hands were red and raw.
My friends all come to help me
But I still can't keep on top
Of this year's ruby harvest
My bumper raspberry crop.
I supose I could cut them down?
No - I couldn't be such a brute
And nothing can brighten a drear winter day
Like a bowl of ripe red summer fruit.
To G.L.
(Thank goodness for freezers)
July 1992
I thought emotional blackmail was for humans
Someone's attention to retain,
But that was before I discovered
The tyranny of the raspberry cane.
I feed and weed and monsters
When the experts say I should
But now that summer is here
And the weather is really good ...
It's difficult to go out
And ignore the plaintive sight
Of redly clustered berries
Free from pests and blight.
There is sorrow and silent reproach
In each red compound eye.
I avert my gaze and steal past
But hear a heartfelt sigh ...
Of raspberry rejection
And it breaks my heart
To spurn their ripe surrender
To cream - or flan - or tart.
But I did spend four hours yesterday
And five the day before
Picking and picking and picking
'Till my hands were red and raw.
My friends all come to help me
But I still can't keep on top
Of this year's ruby harvest
My bumper raspberry crop.
I supose I could cut them down?
No - I couldn't be such a brute
And nothing can brighten a drear winter day
Like a bowl of ripe red summer fruit.
To G.L.
(Thank goodness for freezers)
July 1992
IDEAL HOMES - KITCHEN
XXVII B
Whenever I hear a woman say
She cannot live without
A fully fitted kitchen
I always think about ...
A woman that I once saw
In an Indian street
Who cooked while ragged children
Played around her feet.
No micro-wave for her -
Just a pile of smouldering sticks
And instead of a ceramic hob,
A line of standing bricks.
A paving slab of basalt
Was her chopping board
In rusty tins and bottles
Her few groceries were stored.
She's grateful for a shared cold tap
For beyond her wildest dreams
Is a sink with running water
And a kitchen neat and clean.
There's a mouthwatering smell of spices
As hot hoil sizzles and spits,
I'm sure it tastes as good as anything
Served at the Hilton or Ritz.
17.2.1992
Near D.N.Road, Bombay
Whenever I hear a woman say
She cannot live without
A fully fitted kitchen
I always think about ...
A woman that I once saw
In an Indian street
Who cooked while ragged children
Played around her feet.
No micro-wave for her -
Just a pile of smouldering sticks
And instead of a ceramic hob,
A line of standing bricks.
A paving slab of basalt
Was her chopping board
In rusty tins and bottles
Her few groceries were stored.
She's grateful for a shared cold tap
For beyond her wildest dreams
Is a sink with running water
And a kitchen neat and clean.
There's a mouthwatering smell of spices
As hot hoil sizzles and spits,
I'm sure it tastes as good as anything
Served at the Hilton or Ritz.
17.2.1992
Near D.N.Road, Bombay
IDEAL HOMES - BEDROOM
XXVII
In the affluent Western home
A bedroom has to be
A place of peace and comfort
And quiet luxury.
The carpet is soft and thick -
There's a duvet covered bed.
The decor should be restful -
The home designer said.
The windows are velvet curtained
To keep out all the light,
But the owners often cannot sleep
And toss and turn all night.
Unlike the poor and homeless
Who live on Bombay's streets ...
They have no beds or duvets
No pillows - no sheets.
Their mattress is the pavement -
Their pillow a slab of stone,
Grinding comfort-free poverty
Is all they've ever known.
They sleep because they're exhausted,
They do not need potions or pills
Unlike their wealthy countrymen,
Insomnia's not one of their ills.
So instead of taking a sedative
Next time you cannot sleep
Try counting Bombay's homeless
Instead of counting sheep.
19.1.1991
Wodehouse Road
To.M.W.
In the affluent Western home
A bedroom has to be
A place of peace and comfort
And quiet luxury.
The carpet is soft and thick -
There's a duvet covered bed.
The decor should be restful -
The home designer said.
The windows are velvet curtained
To keep out all the light,
But the owners often cannot sleep
And toss and turn all night.
Unlike the poor and homeless
Who live on Bombay's streets ...
They have no beds or duvets
No pillows - no sheets.
Their mattress is the pavement -
Their pillow a slab of stone,
Grinding comfort-free poverty
Is all they've ever known.
They sleep because they're exhausted,
They do not need potions or pills
Unlike their wealthy countrymen,
Insomnia's not one of their ills.
So instead of taking a sedative
Next time you cannot sleep
Try counting Bombay's homeless
Instead of counting sheep.
19.1.1991
Wodehouse Road
To.M.W.
WORDSWORTH HAS RUINED THE LAKE DISTRICT
XXVI
Look at what Wordsworth
Has done to our Lakes countryside.
The wild and rolling fells are now
Swamped by a day tripper tide.
Where Wordsworth shared his solitude
With hosts of daffodils
Drivers now queue nose to tail
Up and down the hills.
Wandering lonely as a cloud
Is impossible if you are near
Derwent Water - Ambleside
And specially Windermere.
Wordsworth's Lake District
With wild flower meads was scented.
The air we breathe in now has been
Combustion engine vented.
As everybody seeks out
The Lakeland Wordsworth knew
Boots destroy his daffodils
And tourists ruin the view.
The cars - noise - litter
Must make the locals lament
That Wordsworth didn't see daffodils
In Sussex - or Cornwall - or Kent.
March 1989
To G.C.
Look at what Wordsworth
Has done to our Lakes countryside.
The wild and rolling fells are now
Swamped by a day tripper tide.
Where Wordsworth shared his solitude
With hosts of daffodils
Drivers now queue nose to tail
Up and down the hills.
Wandering lonely as a cloud
Is impossible if you are near
Derwent Water - Ambleside
And specially Windermere.
Wordsworth's Lake District
With wild flower meads was scented.
The air we breathe in now has been
Combustion engine vented.
As everybody seeks out
The Lakeland Wordsworth knew
Boots destroy his daffodils
And tourists ruin the view.
The cars - noise - litter
Must make the locals lament
That Wordsworth didn't see daffodils
In Sussex - or Cornwall - or Kent.
March 1989
To G.C.
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
THE ETERNAL OPTIMISTS
XXV
I always have liked growing things,
So now with more time on hand
I thought I'd take an allotment
And join the little band...
Of optimistic masochists
Who, in all weathers can be found
Trying to wrest a harvest
From the reluctant ground.
Either it's too cold and wet
So that the seeds all rot,
Or else your struggling seedings die
Because it is too hot.
But gardeners as a race
Are notoriously hard to please,
Some want it sunny for their strawberries
Some want it wet for their peas.
We have some fair weather gardeners
Who come out with the flowers of spring,
Plant their beans and tomatoes
And vanish when the swallows take wing.
For any allotment gardener
An optimistic nature is a must
To cope with slugs and codling moth,
Mildew - mould and rust;
Snails - rabbits - caterpillars
And flies - green, black and white,
Birds - moles - foxes
And various types of blight.
You think you will save money
When you have a bumper crop,
Then as your yield increases
Shop prices start to drop.
But when you eat a ripe strawberry,
Warm from the sun's morning kiss,
You realise that in no supermarket
Can you buy flavour like this.
November 1994
I DON'T KNOW IF I'VE TOLD YOU .....
XXIV
As the years go by I've developed
A tendency to repeat
Comments, ideas, annecdotes -
But I'm still discreet.
Even though a warning voice
Whispers in my ear
That my captive listener
Does not want to hear.....
The same old story from my past
That I've told her before,
I ignore the little voice
And go through it once more.
Even if she gently murmers:
"Oh yes, you did say ...."
I've started so I'll finish
Before she gets away.
I too have endured repetition,
So I know it can be a bore
Listening to a story
You've heard many times before.
So why do I still do it?
I just wish I knew;
But if I should ever
Repeat myself to you...
Tell me very firmly
You don't want to hear it again -
And when you repeat yourself
I will do the same!
July 1993
As the years go by I've developed
A tendency to repeat
Comments, ideas, annecdotes -
But I'm still discreet.
Even though a warning voice
Whispers in my ear
That my captive listener
Does not want to hear.....
The same old story from my past
That I've told her before,
I ignore the little voice
And go through it once more.
Even if she gently murmers:
"Oh yes, you did say ...."
I've started so I'll finish
Before she gets away.
I too have endured repetition,
So I know it can be a bore
Listening to a story
You've heard many times before.
So why do I still do it?
I just wish I knew;
But if I should ever
Repeat myself to you...
Tell me very firmly
You don't want to hear it again -
And when you repeat yourself
I will do the same!
July 1993
I BELONG TO TWO DIFFERENT COUNTRIES
XXIII
People who move to another country
Often don't belong in either place.
|I am very fortunate because
For me the opposite is the case.
I left the land where I was born
When I was twenty-one.
The English and their weather seemed cold
Compared to India's warmth and sun.
But - after forty years
I appreciate English life
The many opportunities it offers
Without too much stress and strife.
The English, when you get to know them,
Are a kind and tolerant race ,
And I couldn't live anywhere else -
I love this green and pleasant place.
But, when I return to India -
Specially if I go on my own
I feel as if I've never left -
How fast the years have flown...
So I can call two countries 'home'
And in both I feel I belong -
Walking in a cool green woodland glade
Or through Bombay's bustling throng.
Written September 1994
revised 2004 and 2011
People who move to another country
Often don't belong in either place.
|I am very fortunate because
For me the opposite is the case.
I left the land where I was born
When I was twenty-one.
The English and their weather seemed cold
Compared to India's warmth and sun.
But - after forty years
I appreciate English life
The many opportunities it offers
Without too much stress and strife.
The English, when you get to know them,
Are a kind and tolerant race ,
And I couldn't live anywhere else -
I love this green and pleasant place.
But, when I return to India -
Specially if I go on my own
I feel as if I've never left -
How fast the years have flown...
So I can call two countries 'home'
And in both I feel I belong -
Walking in a cool green woodland glade
Or through Bombay's bustling throng.
Written September 1994
revised 2004 and 2011
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
NO.1 CARDBOARD CITY
XXII
As I lay on the sofa
Suffering from a heavy dose of 'flu,
Barbed wire seemed to line my throat
And my head ached too.
My cough was deep and chesty
And I felt so sorry for me
Until I thought of just how bad
Life could really be.
My bed is warm and dry
I can lie in it all day,
Unlike the shop-door sleepers
Who have to move away.
And if it should pour with rain
I've a roof over my head
Pavement sleepers must make do with
A plastic sheet above their bed.
I can have a hot bath -
Change my clothes whenever I like,
Keeping clean on the streets is a battle -
No wonder folk give up the fight.
I can get up at any time
To make a comforting hot drink,
The bath and toilet are close at hand
And I cannot help but think ...
Of cardboard city dwellers
With no heating, kettle or loo.
Life must be absolute hell for them
When they are stricken by the 'flu.
Some have no one to turn to
No one cares if they live or die,
So as |I wait for my aches and pains to go
Very very grateful am I.
Waterloo Station
November 1994
As I lay on the sofa
Suffering from a heavy dose of 'flu,
Barbed wire seemed to line my throat
And my head ached too.
My cough was deep and chesty
And I felt so sorry for me
Until I thought of just how bad
Life could really be.
My bed is warm and dry
I can lie in it all day,
Unlike the shop-door sleepers
Who have to move away.
And if it should pour with rain
I've a roof over my head
Pavement sleepers must make do with
A plastic sheet above their bed.
I can have a hot bath -
Change my clothes whenever I like,
Keeping clean on the streets is a battle -
No wonder folk give up the fight.
I can get up at any time
To make a comforting hot drink,
The bath and toilet are close at hand
And I cannot help but think ...
Of cardboard city dwellers
With no heating, kettle or loo.
Life must be absolute hell for them
When they are stricken by the 'flu.
Some have no one to turn to
No one cares if they live or die,
So as |I wait for my aches and pains to go
Very very grateful am I.
Waterloo Station
November 1994
ENGLISH IS A LANGUAGE DESIGNED TWO CONFUSE
XXI
English is a language
Designed two confuse
And that is the reason why
We like too use
Different spellings four
The same sounding word
Even though that is sew
Obviously absurd.
Wee still hang on too
Our idiosyncrasies
And will never allow
Anyone two ease
The burden of spelling
On hapless foreign folk.
Inn fact we find there problem
Something of a joke.
Without are awkward spelling
They wood learn English even faster,
For ours is an easy language two learn
But an impossible won to master.
To K.M.
Written October 1994
English is a language
Designed two confuse
And that is the reason why
We like too use
Different spellings four
The same sounding word
Even though that is sew
Obviously absurd.
Wee still hang on too
Our idiosyncrasies
And will never allow
Anyone two ease
The burden of spelling
On hapless foreign folk.
Inn fact we find there problem
Something of a joke.
Without are awkward spelling
They wood learn English even faster,
For ours is an easy language two learn
But an impossible won to master.
To K.M.
Written October 1994
THE EURO PITCHER PLANT
XX
The euro monetary system
Is like a pitcher plant,
It can be easy to get in, but
When you want to leave - you can't.
The advantages are clearly shown -
Think of nectar on the flower lip;
Problems only reveal themselves
As down you gently slip.
Like an insect trapped in a flower,
Once you're in you can't get out,
No matter how you struggle,
Complain - protest - shout.
Some leaders thought the Euro zone
Would give them more authority.
Some countries even voted for
The death of their own currency.
It's fine in the good years,
But when economies crash
The authorities in Brussels decide
Which budgets you must slash.
When financial systems fail and flounder -
As drowning insects fight and flap -
Do countries wish their leaders
Had avoided the honeyed Euro trap?
February 2011
The euro monetary system
Is like a pitcher plant,
It can be easy to get in, but
When you want to leave - you can't.
The advantages are clearly shown -
Think of nectar on the flower lip;
Problems only reveal themselves
As down you gently slip.
Like an insect trapped in a flower,
Once you're in you can't get out,
No matter how you struggle,
Complain - protest - shout.
Some leaders thought the Euro zone
Would give them more authority.
Some countries even voted for
The death of their own currency.
It's fine in the good years,
But when economies crash
The authorities in Brussels decide
Which budgets you must slash.
When financial systems fail and flounder -
As drowning insects fight and flap -
Do countries wish their leaders
Had avoided the honeyed Euro trap?
February 2011
Friday, 18 March 2011
TO MY MEMORY - COME BACK ALL IS FORGIVEN.
XIX
I don't mind getting older
But what I most regret
Is the difficulty I have in remembering
And the ease with which I forget.
I once had a wonderful memory,
Could remember where we'd been
What we'd done, who we'd met
And all that we had seen.
Now I go upstairs to fetch something
Then stand in the middle of the floor
Because I cannot remember
What I've come up for.
And if I am talking about
A person - or a place,
The name I need suddenly
Disappears in space.
Sometimes I work around the name
Hoping my listener won't realise
That all this elegant eloquence
Is but a cunning disguise.
I go through the alphabet
To find the word's first letter
Or pounce upon it suddenly -
That doesn't work any better.
It hovers on the outskirts of my mind
J-u-s-t out of reach.
Impervious to curses, cajolery
Or the techniques that memory experts teach.
If I ignore the elusive word
I very often find
That at some unexpected moment
It pops back into my mind.
I meant to end this poem
On a profound and helpful tack,
But the final verse has fled my mind
And refuses to come back.......
August 1997
I don't mind getting older
But what I most regret
Is the difficulty I have in remembering
And the ease with which I forget.
I once had a wonderful memory,
Could remember where we'd been
What we'd done, who we'd met
And all that we had seen.
Now I go upstairs to fetch something
Then stand in the middle of the floor
Because I cannot remember
What I've come up for.
And if I am talking about
A person - or a place,
The name I need suddenly
Disappears in space.
Sometimes I work around the name
Hoping my listener won't realise
That all this elegant eloquence
Is but a cunning disguise.
I go through the alphabet
To find the word's first letter
Or pounce upon it suddenly -
That doesn't work any better.
It hovers on the outskirts of my mind
J-u-s-t out of reach.
Impervious to curses, cajolery
Or the techniques that memory experts teach.
If I ignore the elusive word
I very often find
That at some unexpected moment
It pops back into my mind.
I meant to end this poem
On a profound and helpful tack,
But the final verse has fled my mind
And refuses to come back.......
August 1997
PICASSO'S PRACTICAL JOKE
XVIII
Picasso was a very good artist
When he was in his prime,
But found that proper painting
Took up too much time.
So he discarded accuracy
And found to his surprise
That it really didn't matter
Where he put his model's eyes.
. . . . . (He invented bio-morphic rearrangement
. . . . . of human parts)
Then he cut back on detail
And limited his colours as well,
But the simpler that his art became
The better it did sell.
- . . . . (He was an expert in schematic expression.)
Now Picasso was no fool,
He acted with restraint
He didn't flood the market -
It saved him money on paint.
He left his easel in a corner
And whenever he'd nothing to do
He'd pick up his brush or palette knife
And add a squiggle or two.
. . . . .(His plastic inventions also extended to sculpture)
Only the title tells you are
If you are meant to see
A model - scenery or a still life
There are so many things that it could be.
. . . . .(Picasso destroyed the philosophy that representation
. . . . .is a pre-condition of picture making.)
The experts took Picasso seriously
They didn't know his pictures were a prank
While Pablo laughed uproariously
All the way to his bank.
. . . . . (They called him an avant garde innovator
. . . . . and extrovert proselytizer)
I'm sure all this is libellous,
Scurrilous and possibly untrue
But this is still a free country
And I'm entitled to my view.
1991
Picasso was a very good artist
When he was in his prime,
But found that proper painting
Took up too much time.
So he discarded accuracy
And found to his surprise
That it really didn't matter
Where he put his model's eyes.
. . . . . (He invented bio-morphic rearrangement
. . . . . of human parts)
Then he cut back on detail
And limited his colours as well,
But the simpler that his art became
The better it did sell.
- . . . . (He was an expert in schematic expression.)
Now Picasso was no fool,
He acted with restraint
He didn't flood the market -
It saved him money on paint.
He left his easel in a corner
And whenever he'd nothing to do
He'd pick up his brush or palette knife
And add a squiggle or two.
. . . . .(His plastic inventions also extended to sculpture)
Only the title tells you are
If you are meant to see
A model - scenery or a still life
There are so many things that it could be.
. . . . .(Picasso destroyed the philosophy that representation
. . . . .is a pre-condition of picture making.)
The experts took Picasso seriously
They didn't know his pictures were a prank
While Pablo laughed uproariously
All the way to his bank.
. . . . . (They called him an avant garde innovator
. . . . . and extrovert proselytizer)
I'm sure all this is libellous,
Scurrilous and possibly untrue
But this is still a free country
And I'm entitled to my view.
1991
Friday, 11 March 2011
THE YELLOW RAPE OF THE COUNTRYSIDE
XVII
What is this crop that's spreading
Across our countryside -
Burying our green and pleasant land
Beneath a yellow tide.
Our landscape is soothing and gentle
And greenly refined,
Acres of aggressive yellow
Aggravate the mind.
A few splashes of colour
Brighten up the scene,
Mile after mile of strident lemon
Makes your senses reel.
But - when summer weather
Is dismal, drear and chill
It's a patch of captured sunshine
On a distant hill.
Written 25.5.88
(M1 - return from Cosford Air Museum)
What is this crop that's spreading
Across our countryside -
Burying our green and pleasant land
Beneath a yellow tide.
Our landscape is soothing and gentle
And greenly refined,
Acres of aggressive yellow
Aggravate the mind.
A few splashes of colour
Brighten up the scene,
Mile after mile of strident lemon
Makes your senses reel.
But - when summer weather
Is dismal, drear and chill
It's a patch of captured sunshine
On a distant hill.
Written 25.5.88
(M1 - return from Cosford Air Museum)
TWINKLE TWINKLE LITTLE STAR, HOW I WONDER WHAT YOU ARE.
XVI
With modern telescopes
We need wonder no more,
As massive new refractors
The heavens now explore.
You could be a pulsar,
Giant red or dwarf white,
An exploding supernova -
The astrologers' delight.
Perhaps you are a binary -
A comet from afar;
Or one of our own planets,
An ancient wandering star.
Could you be an asteroid
Or a distant sun?
Neutron star or nebula?
You could be any one.
Things were so much simpler
Centuries ago,
When a star was just a twinkling light
After the sunset glow.
Written February 1990
With modern telescopes
We need wonder no more,
As massive new refractors
The heavens now explore.
You could be a pulsar,
Giant red or dwarf white,
An exploding supernova -
The astrologers' delight.
Perhaps you are a binary -
A comet from afar;
Or one of our own planets,
An ancient wandering star.
Could you be an asteroid
Or a distant sun?
Neutron star or nebula?
You could be any one.
Things were so much simpler
Centuries ago,
When a star was just a twinkling light
After the sunset glow.
Written February 1990
Thursday, 10 March 2011
THE EASTER PARADE
XV
In olden days a few holy men
Would mortify their flesh in various ways
In modern, sinful England everybody does it -
It's called The Easter Holidays.
The penitents are up before the sunrise
Some don't even stop to break their fast,
Then spend hours immobile on the motorway,
It's a form of penance unsurpassed.
When finally they reach their destination,
Tired and hungry - full of woe,
Every parking place has been taken,
There really is nowhere they can go.
After the flesh has been tormented
With chilly winds and frequent freezing rain,
The homeward journey still awaits the sinner -
The modern version of the whip and chain.
The Almighty must have a sense of humour,
For, after weeks of warmth and sun
He switches back to winter over Easter,
To give the masochists some extra fun.
Those who have been really sinful
Have to take their holidays abroad.
Hours of painful suffering await them,
But they know it is their just reward.
Sometimes an airport is fog-bound
Or foreign air controllers are on strike,
Exhausted children whine and fret and grizzle
As boring day turns into boring night.
At last the nation's sins are fully purged
And everyone is back at work again,
By the time Easter comes round once more
We'll have forgotton all this stress and strain.
Written 15.4.1990
(One of my favourites)
In olden days a few holy men
Would mortify their flesh in various ways
In modern, sinful England everybody does it -
It's called The Easter Holidays.
The penitents are up before the sunrise
Some don't even stop to break their fast,
Then spend hours immobile on the motorway,
It's a form of penance unsurpassed.
When finally they reach their destination,
Tired and hungry - full of woe,
Every parking place has been taken,
There really is nowhere they can go.
After the flesh has been tormented
With chilly winds and frequent freezing rain,
The homeward journey still awaits the sinner -
The modern version of the whip and chain.
The Almighty must have a sense of humour,
For, after weeks of warmth and sun
He switches back to winter over Easter,
To give the masochists some extra fun.
Those who have been really sinful
Have to take their holidays abroad.
Hours of painful suffering await them,
But they know it is their just reward.
Sometimes an airport is fog-bound
Or foreign air controllers are on strike,
Exhausted children whine and fret and grizzle
As boring day turns into boring night.
At last the nation's sins are fully purged
And everyone is back at work again,
By the time Easter comes round once more
We'll have forgotton all this stress and strain.
Written 15.4.1990
(One of my favourites)
MIRROR, MIRROR ON THE WALL
XIV
One thing you must get rid of
As you get more mature
Is that full length mirror
Inside your bathroom door.
We are now dependent on
The girdle maker's skill,
For once you get past fifty
Everything that can droop - will.
If you must have a bathroom mirror
Don't look at yourself in the nude.
Avert your gaze - look elsewhere
It doesn't mean you're a prude.
Your body still looks youthful
When viewed from the top,
But when it's seen in profile
You notice signs of drop.
I'm talking about average women
Not those who are bone and skin.
In the war between muscle and gravity
You know that the latter will win.
If you are a masochist
And a quick look you cannot resist,
Be patient - try to wait until
Your mirror's steamed over with mist.
If the mirror still draws your eye
Take this advice from me:
Raise your arms above your head
And a much slimmer view you will see!
Written December 1987
One thing you must get rid of
As you get more mature
Is that full length mirror
Inside your bathroom door.
We are now dependent on
The girdle maker's skill,
For once you get past fifty
Everything that can droop - will.
If you must have a bathroom mirror
Don't look at yourself in the nude.
Avert your gaze - look elsewhere
It doesn't mean you're a prude.
Your body still looks youthful
When viewed from the top,
But when it's seen in profile
You notice signs of drop.
I'm talking about average women
Not those who are bone and skin.
In the war between muscle and gravity
You know that the latter will win.
If you are a masochist
And a quick look you cannot resist,
Be patient - try to wait until
Your mirror's steamed over with mist.
If the mirror still draws your eye
Take this advice from me:
Raise your arms above your head
And a much slimmer view you will see!
Written December 1987
I FEEL SO SORRY FOR MEN
XIII
You can't help feeling sorry for men
In these female liberated days,
Their lives have changed considerably
In so many different ways.
Their children disagree with them
And what is more
No longer are they patriarchs
Whose every word is law.
Victorian men believed a woman
Was a simple little soul -
A well looked after husband
Was her major goal.
How men must long for the Good Old days
When women knew their place
As suppliers of domestic comfort -
A lower serving race.
Written in October 1990
You can't help feeling sorry for men
In these female liberated days,
Their lives have changed considerably
In so many different ways.
Their children disagree with them
And what is more
No longer are they patriarchs
Whose every word is law.
Victorian men believed a woman
Was a simple little soul -
A well looked after husband
Was her major goal.
How men must long for the Good Old days
When women knew their place
As suppliers of domestic comfort -
A lower serving race.
Written in October 1990
NATURE RULES OUR PLANET
XII
We humans like to think that we
Control our destiny,
We dam our mighty rivers -
And reclaim land from the sea.
We tamper with genetics
And change the DNA
We think that mankind benefits
So that is quite o.k.
Our scientists are brilliant -
By manipulating genes
We've plants that poison insects
And brightly glowing greens.
Nature views our efforts
With a smile upon her face
And when she thinks we've gone too far
She puts us in her place.
When she wants to let us know
Just what she can do
She flicks her little finger
And violent quakes ensue.
A gentle sigh from her
And gales and cyclones blow -
And when she weeps at Mankind's ways
Foaming torrents flow.
So though we like to think that we
Control our destiny,
Our planet's rulers really are
The rivers, the sky and the sea.
Written July 1990
We humans like to think that we
Control our destiny,
We dam our mighty rivers -
And reclaim land from the sea.
We tamper with genetics
And change the DNA
We think that mankind benefits
So that is quite o.k.
Our scientists are brilliant -
By manipulating genes
We've plants that poison insects
And brightly glowing greens.
Nature views our efforts
With a smile upon her face
And when she thinks we've gone too far
She puts us in her place.
When she wants to let us know
Just what she can do
She flicks her little finger
And violent quakes ensue.
A gentle sigh from her
And gales and cyclones blow -
And when she weeps at Mankind's ways
Foaming torrents flow.
So though we like to think that we
Control our destiny,
Our planet's rulers really are
The rivers, the sky and the sea.
Written July 1990
THE SECRET LIFE OF THE SOCK
XI
Is there some place, somewhere
That old socks go to die -
A celestial hosiery heaven,
Or the sock drawer in the sky?
The widowed partner will now lead
A solitary life
For odd socks seldom find another
Husband or wife.
Sometimes a sock will vanish
And I won't see it for years,
But if I throw its mate away
It promptly re-appears.
If socks won't stay together
Until they're both worn through,
I have thought of something
Else that I can do.
I will buy a dozen pairs
Exactly the same;
A flourishing sock commune
Is my eventual aim.
If my breeding programme
Goes as I have planned,
Every year another clutch
Of socks should come to hand.
And if their life is happy
Beneath the skirts and frocks
I hope I'll never need to buy
Another pair of socks.
June 1990
Is there some place, somewhere
That old socks go to die -
A celestial hosiery heaven,
Or the sock drawer in the sky?
The widowed partner will now lead
A solitary life
For odd socks seldom find another
Husband or wife.
Sometimes a sock will vanish
And I won't see it for years,
But if I throw its mate away
It promptly re-appears.
If socks won't stay together
Until they're both worn through,
I have thought of something
Else that I can do.
I will buy a dozen pairs
Exactly the same;
A flourishing sock commune
Is my eventual aim.
If my breeding programme
Goes as I have planned,
Every year another clutch
Of socks should come to hand.
And if their life is happy
Beneath the skirts and frocks
I hope I'll never need to buy
Another pair of socks.
June 1990
WISH YOU WERE HERE
X
Exotic foreign holidays
Are great to look back on
When your life's returned to normal
And your dysentery has gone.
Getting there is stressful
You just cannot relax
With overbooking problems
And the excess baggage tax.
At journey's end you're faced with
Dirt, disease and flies,
As scenes of abject poverty
Assault your sheltered eyes.
Though you are on holiday
Your problems never end:
How much money should you keep?
How much should you spend?
Your journey home again
Is also very fraught
As you try to fit in
The unwanted gifts you've bought.
But when you view your pictures,
Or your slides upon the screen
You really do appreciate
The places that you've seen.
So instead of going on holiday
How much simpler it would be
To hire some travel videos
And watch them on TV.
March 1990
Exotic foreign holidays
Are great to look back on
When your life's returned to normal
And your dysentery has gone.
Getting there is stressful
You just cannot relax
With overbooking problems
And the excess baggage tax.
At journey's end you're faced with
Dirt, disease and flies,
As scenes of abject poverty
Assault your sheltered eyes.
Though you are on holiday
Your problems never end:
How much money should you keep?
How much should you spend?
Your journey home again
Is also very fraught
As you try to fit in
The unwanted gifts you've bought.
But when you view your pictures,
Or your slides upon the screen
You really do appreciate
The places that you've seen.
So instead of going on holiday
How much simpler it would be
To hire some travel videos
And watch them on TV.
March 1990
PACKAGE PEOPLE
IX
The people for whom they make
The modern aircraft seat
Must be thin, with narrow hips,
Short legs and little feet.
Supple shoulders are a must
So that one can eat
And still avoid the passenger
In the neighbouring seat.
The charming girl suggest that we
"Sit back - enjoy the flight."
But that isn't easy when
Your seat is bolt upright.
Every seat designer
Should be made to fly
Around the world (Economy Class)
To give his seats a try.
Written on a London to Sydney flight
December 1989
The people for whom they make
The modern aircraft seat
Must be thin, with narrow hips,
Short legs and little feet.
Supple shoulders are a must
So that one can eat
And still avoid the passenger
In the neighbouring seat.
The charming girl suggest that we
"Sit back - enjoy the flight."
But that isn't easy when
Your seat is bolt upright.
Every seat designer
Should be made to fly
Around the world (Economy Class)
To give his seats a try.
Written on a London to Sydney flight
December 1989
DAWN
VIII
I love going out at first light
When everything is still
And the roads are lined with sleeping cars
In the early morning chill.
The windows are all frosted
With an icy opaque glaze
As the waking sun struggles through
Veils of misty haze.
Spiders' webs are picked out
With beads of diamond dew
And the eastern sky's a-blush with
An embarrassed rosy hue.
On the lawn are scattered
Glistening rainbow-bright gems;
Now sapphire, now emerald, now ruby
They tremble on slim grassy stems.
As dawn is such a lovely time
I do wish I knew why
I seldom seem to get outside
'Till the sun is fairly high.
April 1988
I love going out at first light
When everything is still
And the roads are lined with sleeping cars
In the early morning chill.
The windows are all frosted
With an icy opaque glaze
As the waking sun struggles through
Veils of misty haze.
Spiders' webs are picked out
With beads of diamond dew
And the eastern sky's a-blush with
An embarrassed rosy hue.
On the lawn are scattered
Glistening rainbow-bright gems;
Now sapphire, now emerald, now ruby
They tremble on slim grassy stems.
As dawn is such a lovely time
I do wish I knew why
I seldom seem to get outside
'Till the sun is fairly high.
April 1988
Thursday, 3 March 2011
THE EXTENSION OF ENGLISH
VII
We say "ab-so-lut-ely"
When what we mean is "yes"
Four syllables have more emphasis
Than a single one - I guess.
And instead of "now" we say
"At this moment in time"
Padding out a sentence
Is not a grammatical crime.
"I myself am of the opinion ..."
What's wrong with "I think"
Its meaning is the same -
It's short - and it's succinct.
"There you go..." - "I mean to say" -
"You know what I mean"
All common pointless phrases
That dot the vocal scene.
English can be a concise language
But in recent years there's been a trend
To use six words where one would do
And every sentence extend.
Are these meaningless words used
Because we are so vexed
By the savage abbreviations
Of the world of text?
May 2007
We say "ab-so-lut-ely"
When what we mean is "yes"
Four syllables have more emphasis
Than a single one - I guess.
And instead of "now" we say
"At this moment in time"
Padding out a sentence
Is not a grammatical crime.
"I myself am of the opinion ..."
What's wrong with "I think"
Its meaning is the same -
It's short - and it's succinct.
"There you go..." - "I mean to say" -
"You know what I mean"
All common pointless phrases
That dot the vocal scene.
English can be a concise language
But in recent years there's been a trend
To use six words where one would do
And every sentence extend.
Are these meaningless words used
Because we are so vexed
By the savage abbreviations
Of the world of text?
May 2007
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