Sunday, May 25, 2014

Cornish Cliffs

Those moments, tasted once and never done,
Of long surf breaking in the mid-day sun.
A far-off blow-hole booming like a gun-

The seagulls plane and circle out of sight
Below this thirsty, thrift-encrusted height,
The veined sea-campion buds burst into white

And gorse turns tawny orange, seen beside
Pale drifts of primroses cascading wide
To where the slate falls sheer into the tide.

More than in gardened Surrey, nature spills
A wealth of heather, kidney-vetch and squills
Over these long-defended Cornish hills.

A gun-emplacement of the latest war
Looks older than the hill fort built before
Saxon or Norman headed for the shore.

And in the shadowless, unclouded glare
Deep blue above us fades to whiteness where
A misty sea-line meets the wash of air.

Nut-smell of gorse and honey-smell of ling
Waft out to sea the freshness of the spring
On sunny shallows, green and whispering.

The wideness which the lark-song gives the sky
Shrinks at the clang of sea-birds sailing by
Whose notes are tuned to days when seas are high.

From today's calm, the lane's enclosing green
Leads inland to a usual Cornish scene-
Slate cottages with sycamore between,

Small fields and tellymasts and wires and poles
With, as the everlasting ocean rolls,
Two chapels built for half a hundred souls. 

John Betjeman

Friday, May 16, 2014

She paints the sea red

The moon paints her lips red, opens the door and shines. Her jewels glisten on the curves of the water as her hips dance to rhythm of nature.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Poetry (in ocean)


Viking
North Utsire
South Utsire
Forties
Cromarty
Forth
Tyne
Dogger
Fisher
German Bight
Humber
Thames
Dover
Wight
Portland
Plymouth
Biscay
Trafalgar
FitzRoy
(Finisterre)
Sole
Lundy
Fastnet
Irish Sea
Shannon
Rockall
Malin
Hebrides
Bailey
Fair Isle
Faeroes
Southeast Iceland

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Nightpoetry


Dress neck to sole
brogue laced
and swiftstride
alongside the saltsea battered
coastal defences
gulls mimic the ack-ack
attack-attack-attacka
from masts and the past
strobe flows across
the carpet gardens
from the balloon lined
dysfunction rooms
down to the flaked edges of oldtown
crunchleather stones are picked up
and flungtossed sidearm
into the bibberty-bobberty
light bulbs weave waves
along the length breadth
of the repeat repeat to the end
testing for a fault
resting at the fort
old words walk
along old walls
as the ritual of nightpoetry
rears up and up
like the foamsmash
at the pierjump
rushing through
my sand coated
cold iron fingers.

We know
You know

...I can’t make this walk home
without the call of your tide
flooding my heart once more...

Monday, January 7, 2013

A homesick lament

Walking on sunshine in the italian gardens, diplocks, students, the sun, mushrooms, the cry of the gulls, the sea in the moonlight, ziggys, sledging by the martello, the sea anytime, heptet, bang utot (Mike R.I.P), concerto of lovers, the spartan, chaterlands, the acceleration couch (Gary R.I.P), the foghorn, the sea... the sea .... the sea. How on Earth did I end up living in the fucking Midlands?



Chris Blaubac
http://blaubacphoto.wordpress.com/2013/01/05/down-to-the-sea/

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

He only wrote poems in the sand


A decade of cinders, charred and recoiling
like flames on ice, burning himself
into the silence of the tides
sat on the edge of the sea, cold, unambiguous
dressed head to toe in sympathetic shades
of a sickened summer
as the boys on drift boards, surf by on clouds
heading inland as the eddies and swirls
build steep turrets and walls
whilst the vast temporal cadences
offer themselves up to sly celestial forces
he writes poems in the sand
scratched in the stars
sprawled on the sand
the agonies and rusted anguish
of life burnt away, not so much snubbed
as whispered out, the petrified seaweed
clings to the salt-cloaked body
the huge canon of work, smeared from history
by the sweet rolling waves.
He has no other dreams at all
always on the beach detained and cleansed
like a prisoner on the block, forgetting his crime
like the poems that he wrote in the sand.





Andrew Franks
from Scratched in the stars, sprawled on the sand - 2009

Sunday, July 8, 2012

And so it began...

With a crumbling cucumber sandy-wich
a thermos of brackish tea
and stern resilience in the face of a biting so'westerly.

Camped behind a mound of shingle
and the storm lashed groyne
there is no better place to write

there is no better place to be!