This one, quite literally, forced itself on me this morning. Doesn't happen often - never usually that lucky!
We stand on steps
of thin, clear glass -
A staircase spiralling
away through
stormy clouds above.
'Look up' I say, but
no - your gaze stays
resolutely level.
I hold your hand
curled close in mine -
Your fingers frost-
bitten; shy. Your
feet firm-planted
on your stair. Below
them swirling air.
'Look down,' I say.
And that you do, the
dizzy misty mess
from which we grew.
I step up.
Just one.
Stretch out
my arm.
Hold on
to you.
Kate Sermon
Thursday, 13 December 2012
Thursday, 22 November 2012
November
Bit of a meloncholy one tonight; inspired by a winter's day.
November Sky
November Sky
We live in a rain-drenched land.
Soggy sodden slips of cloud slowly
rise above the wind and fight to find
that last man standing.
Underfoot and overhead; tupperware sky,
the lid ajar. A stripe of light unhindered by
the depth of slate that
boxes us in.
A vein of sheep like aphids on a fresh
green leaf follow the one in front down
to the icy lake. Falling into tangled weed
set seed in summer.
set seed in summer.
This sparse sick land made deep and mean by
the weight of lead on hunched-up backs. Crunch
through frost and we connect again through the
shivering stream of scars.
That always leave their mark.
Saturday, 13 October 2012
Friday Night
Inspired by being apart from the family last night and listening to them all.
UPSTAIRS
Hush
a murmur -
a burst of mirth - you laugh.
A giggly boy or two; the
drone of you
mixed with monkey's bonding squeals
drift up the stairs; on sweet
paternal air.
Then a deep man's voice where
once a boy's ascended - mellow with
early manhood. Resonating;
capitulating - exclaims agreement.
And I see through gauze
made muddy by time
us five - still woven
warmly -
Hush.
UPSTAIRS
Hush
a murmur -
a burst of mirth - you laugh.
A giggly boy or two; the
drone of you
mixed with monkey's bonding squeals
drift up the stairs; on sweet
paternal air.
Then a deep man's voice where
once a boy's ascended - mellow with
early manhood. Resonating;
capitulating - exclaims agreement.
And I see through gauze
made muddy by time
us five - still woven
warmly -
Hush.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
This one hit me today; inspired by the release of the GCSE results
5%
(for Gabriel)
You are one of them -
the 5% that exist head down
in the corridors. Buried in a book that
takes ages to
read; red in the face from
getting things wrong.
Quiet and small; fringe grown long -
too scared to walk
tall. Stuck in a puddle muddied
by their scorn.
And yet -
You are one of them -
who fly into
who fly into
the wind, to make themselves
stronger. Refuse to give in.
Answer bullies with grins - holding tight
stronger. Refuse to give in.
Answer bullies with grins - holding tight
to that passion that burns in
your bones. A purpose;
a reason to break free from
the clones.
Big hearted; straight spined and
Big hearted; straight spined and
uniquely defined.
Be ready;
the right door is
at last swinging ajar. It
at last swinging ajar. It
needs just one tiny shove -
a deep breath; a step through.
It needs you.
Tuesday, 24 January 2012
Ring the Changes
I thought I'd share a short story tonight. I wrote this in an attempt at historical fiction. Hope you like it!
The Sea Witch
The Sea Witch
The sea was like an
angry wolf today. From first light it began to rally all its strength, and as
the sun made its inevitable voyage across the vast grey heavens it built up
into a raging force that played with us like a child playing with a toy boat in
a bathtub. It rolled us back and forth, back and forth in a bid to throw us off
the deck and pull us into its murky depths. I prayed for my life today and the
lives of my men. Don’t misunderstand me, I am a God fearing man and as such
will welcome the day when the Lord takes me home again. But today there was
evil in the air. As if some sorcery was afoot and that was what so unnerved me.
I have been at sea since I was a boy of twelve. And even
before that, my day dreams were full of sea voyaging and adventures on the
briny deep. The sea has consumed me
every day since then and spits me out into my cabin every night, where I lay
rocking like a babe in the arms of my mother, until light breaks through the
grimy glass in a sword-like shaft upon the wooden floor. I sound morose, do I
not? Well, let me reassure you - I am.
I sit at table, and make my entry in the log. It is the 3rd
of April in the year of our Lord AD 1860:
We are being buffeted with each
fresh gust of outraged storm. I feel even more that magic is controlling this
and some witch somewhere is driving us to ruin.
There
is a knock at the door and the boy comes in with my port and tobacco, a luxury
I cannot deny myself, even here in the middle of the Atlantic. He reassures me
that the cargo is safe and sound in the hold, but that there has been another
outbreak of the flux and they have had to throw another few overboard.
‘Not to worry,’ I say as I light my first pipe of the
evening, ‘we will just figure the loss in, and increase the amount we ask when
ashore.’
I
feel in need of company tonight, so I tell him to stay. He seats himself across
the table from me, and watches me intently as I puff the flame down lower into
the pipe’s bowl. His eyes pierce my skin and seem to see right to the fear that
is lodged in my chest. I offer him a smoke and he takes his pipe from his
pocket. Its plain design is that of a fisherman’s. He stuffs it full of baccy
with expert ease using the same hand with which he clasps the bowl and then
rocks on the back two legs of the chair gracefully as he draws the scented
smoke deep into his body. There is momentary hush within the cabin while the
wind takes a breath and then another wild gust rattles the room. I shiver and
the candle in the lantern flickers in sympathy.
‘Something is amiss this night. I feel it but I cannot
explain it.’ The words leave my lips before I have time to stop myself. The
last thing I need is a worried crew. There is enough talk of retribution and superstition
with this voyage.
‘You may be right Cap’n.’ His eyes are watching me
intently again but for some reason I don’t feel uncomfortable. In actual fact I
almost feel that for one brief moment I am looking at my brother, an equal. It
passes and I pour myself a glass of port. He eyes it greedily and I relish my
power by not offering him one.
‘We shall reach the New World in two nights if this storm
has not thrown us too far off course.’
‘Aye Cap’n, that would be my reckoning too.’ He draws on
his pipe again, taking the last of smoke and savouring it.
***************************************************************************
I am a woman alone. I
can feel the agony of lost generations as I embrace the sea. Here, I stand at
the edge of my world. And I thank God that my tears can join with the sea spray,
that my little one cannot see me weep. The waves siphon up the shingle and spit
out their salty debris. The anger that it exhibits never ceases to take my
breath away. My babe clings to my neck with all the love that she holds in her
small body. Sometimes I feel that love like a wolf protecting and strengthening
me, but not tonight. Tonight her love seems fragile and she whimpers in my arms
begging: ‘go home, go home’. She feels it too.
The villagers call me a witch. They have done so since I
was a girl. My scrawny body meant that I could hide in small places and my
fearful nature meant that I did. Widow March would take over the green space on
a Monday and wring out washing with Mrs Timmins: singing as they worked. The
droplets of soapy water landing like moonstones onto the grass as they hung the
sheets high. I was drawn to them. I would hide in the shrubbery, my knees
pulled tight to my chest, my breath caught in a terror of discovery. They hated
me, called me ‘witch child’ even then. My ma said they were scared of me
because I wouldn’t speak, when later I had come home after a beating. She held
me to her and we became one person, one woman, one being: her muscular arms
enfolding me, her blistered hands stroking my hair, and her beautiful voice
soothing away the fear like the lime wash on the cottage walls. It has been
three years since she passed away.
I
pull back Rose’s hood and she gazes at me with that same trusting look and my
mother’s large, brown eyes. And I tell her in my head that all will be well,
that the morning will come and the dawn will steal our fears and fling them to
the four winds. She hears me - I know this because she smiles. We lumber back
up the beach. By the time we reach the cottage Rose is asleep. I unlatch the
door and place her carefully on the bed, pulling up the covers to surround her
chin and keep the cold from her soft body. The fire in the range has burned low
so I toss on another log and watch it roar in appreciation. I will not sleep
tonight so I sink into the wooden chair and make loose my mind.
It
was solstice eve in the depths of winter when he first unlatched my door. I had
been sat at the window. The snow had lain untouched like an expectant bride.
The moonlight had conjured each frozen puddle into a glassy window and the
world outside lay breathless. The sudden cold chill turned me towards him as he
shut the door. I was not surprised. I had been waiting.
‘I’ve
been watching you,’ he said, his tongue protruding from between his lips. I
said nothing of course. My silence seemed to intrigue him. ‘We have very little
time.’
So
I stood before his gaze as he undressed me with his eyes.
‘You
are beautiful,’ he murmured, ‘so pale.’
He
cupped my chin with one hand, and with the other unlaced my bodice. As he
pulled my corset open his breath caught. I heard him gasp. He was strong as he
pushed me onto the bed. His hands grasped my goose-fleshed arms in the
deepening cold. And I lay beneath him as he loved me. I remember the dying
fire-light flickering on the cottage walls. It was five moons later when my
belly swelled that I fully realised what he had done to me.
******************************************************************
‘Is there a pretty lass
waiting for you back ‘ome?’ His eyes meet mine as he lays his head on my chest.
This is a boundary that he has never dared to cross before.
‘No.’
He
knows from my manner that the matter is closed so he probes no more but his
question does raise questions for me. Do I? I can go when I wish and do as I
wish so she is mine but I am not hers. That would be absurd.
‘Sleep,’
I say.
Tonight
the motion of the ship which usually lulls me is pulling me further from
slumber. I need to be alone, so I order him back to his hammock. His eyes
flicker like a Davy lamp in poisoned air but he says nothing. I watch as he
pulls on his breeches, encasing his gleaming body in the maculate cotton.
‘Pipe
before I go?’ He knows my weakness.
‘No,
not tonight.’
It
is final and he concedes. When he shuts the oak behind him I feel relief rush
through me like rivers after rain.
***************************************************************************
It feels, it feels, oh
how can I describe it? I suppose it feels like my skin is alive. Like there is
a force flowing through me and sparking out of my fingers. Like I make it
happen... Like I have a power...Like I am powerful.
The babe sleeps. I watch her from my chair: her every
breath lingering smoke-like on the air around her body. She breathes with such
rhythm, such trust in life that I want to weep. But tonight I must be strong,
tonight I must remain solid. It is easy when I wrap myself in mist to float
away.
The pot holds the herbal mix that I gathered last full
moon. I dip my hands in. My chapped dry fingers sting and smart. Pulling off my
garments I wash my body, carefully covering every inch of my skin. I am now
ready.
***************************************************************************
It has begun. She
stands before me. I can see her in the gloom. She is a phosphorescent phantom.
‘Why have you come?’ I ask even though I expect no
answer. I pull myself up from my bunk. I sit with my hands gripping the smooth
sanded wood at the edges. And I am not too scared to admit that I am afraid.
She smiles and I can hear her thoughts. The tone of her ‘voice’
is soft and it makes me think of warm blankets.
‘I
have come to warn you...help you.’
This
seems so unlikely that I laugh. At first gently and then the absurdity takes me
over and I find that a full belly laugh is spewing from me. She looks at me with
pity in her face.
‘You
are a dying man, Captain James McIntyre. I am glad you can embrace death with
so much mirth. May the Lord judge your soul a little more seriously.’ Her warm
blanket ‘voice’ is now cold and scratchy.
I
recover myself. ‘I thought you said you were here to help me.’
*********************************************************************
‘And so I am. From
yourself.’ I answer him.
He
stares at me. There is fear but something else seems to be irking him. It
matters not.
‘How many souls do you have on board?’ I can
see my concern is lost on him.
‘Souls?’
‘Yes. How many captured men, women and children do
you have aboard?’
He
grimaces but answers. ‘We had 562 at the outset. And I think maybe we have had
to dispatch around 50.’ He gets to his feet, staggers to the table and thrusts
a handful of papers into the air. ‘They’re legal. I have the papers from their
chiefs. They were not captured. I paid good money for them.’
‘Paid
for them?’ I feel my spirit shimmer with rage. ‘Have you been down in the hold
to see...?’
He
interrupts me and looking away, he reaches for the port. ‘No, that is not my
job.’
‘For
all that is holy, James! They are chained so close they cannot move... the
stench... the noise of the children crying for their mothers. How can this not
affect you? ’
He
looks at me and at once I see it all. The whole tawdry tale spread across his
features: the stink of greed oozing from him.
‘I
have to go.’
He
looks panicked. ‘You said that you would help me.’
‘It
seems I was mistaken.’
‘I
don’t understand. I...’
‘A
warning will have to suffice. They are coming for you, James.’ I close my eyes.
I am ready to go home. ‘It is over.’
‘But
you do not understand...I did it for you, for us...It would have meant freedom
for us. I could have married you.’
I
open my eyes and look straight into his empty soul. And I know the truth.
*********************************************************************
The dawn breaks the
back of the storm and I stand on the starboard side watching the US Navy forging
their way towards us. In the distance, the early morning sun is making white
the sails, as they pull my fate closer towards me.
‘Looks
like it’s finished, Cap’n.’ The boy stands stoically, his hands clasping the
rail.
‘Yes
it does, does it not?’
He
watches the horizon, eyes like slits; his youthful skin already scrubbed raw
with salt; his hope, still alive at odds with my dead resignation.
‘So
am I mouse, or lion?’
‘Sorry
Cap’n?’
‘Do
I sink or swim?’
Confusion
clouds his gaze.
‘Live
or die?’
‘Only
you’d know the answer to that Cap’n.’
He
is right.
*********************************************************************
The
dawn light trickles in: reaching out its arms to comfort us as we sit by the
dying fire. I sing silently to Rose as she wakes from her deep slumber, a song
my mother used to sing to me:
From ev’ry dark
nook they press forward to meet me;
I lift up my
eyes to the broad leafy dome,
And others are
there, looking downward to greet me
The ash grove,
the ash grove, again is my home.
Rose has been away during the night too, but
she returns unburdened. The last
remnants of her dream like gossamer thread dispersing into the ether.
THE
END
Tuesday, 17 January 2012
What I am - not what I do.
Just a wee one today, the first line popped into my head as I chopped up potatoes for dinner. Yoohooing through the letterbox - impossible to ignore.
Writer
I'm speaking from that place - you know
the one. That attic, out of sight,
at the end of the darkest staircase. I tiptoe in -
lay down my brain,
cover it in blankets to
keep it warm.
It's full of books I
haven't read and words I've
whispered but never said. Thoughts I
discarded in the wastepaper bin because
they hurt too much.
Now sat at the pockmarked desk, pen in hand, I
scribble in between the lines. Avoid the gaps which
are fuller than the stops.
I'm prepared for the screaming from
the mad woman
inside - but still she takes me by surprise. It seems
Grace Pool is away today.
Biro blemishes my fingertips, as I skirt around
the issue. Distraction; itchy nose; a tissue.
Writer
I'm speaking from that place - you know
the one. That attic, out of sight,
at the end of the darkest staircase. I tiptoe in -
lay down my brain,
cover it in blankets to
keep it warm.
It's full of books I
haven't read and words I've
whispered but never said. Thoughts I
discarded in the wastepaper bin because
they hurt too much.
Now sat at the pockmarked desk, pen in hand, I
scribble in between the lines. Avoid the gaps which
are fuller than the stops.
I'm prepared for the screaming from
the mad woman
inside - but still she takes me by surprise. It seems
Grace Pool is away today.
Biro blemishes my fingertips, as I skirt around
the issue. Distraction; itchy nose; a tissue.
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