I have just rediscovered this poem from April 2010. I hope you enjoy it.
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Whilst sitting in a park, of which I am fond,
I saw a vast convoy of mothers, rounding the pond.
Each was armed with a resplendent pram or two:
A gaggle of parents and infants with nothing to do.
They marched two-by-two, as animals to the ark,
Apart from a loner, whose singularity was stark.
Had she been ostracised from a trio, or the group entire,
Or was she dreaming of joining the flock to which she aspired?
They pit-stopped round the corner, taking advantage of the shade,
A place which lesser mothers were forced to evade.
These had their prams, their parasols and their housewife's sunglasses too,
But the convoy stared at each one, to say "We are better than you."
Pity the young mother, who pushes her child alone,
Whose day is empty each time she leaves her home.
For she does not delight in the simple comfort and joy
Of parading in glory with the maternal convoy.
© Jack Blackburn, 12th January 2010
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Poems from the Last Eight Weeks
I
Because I
would not dull you with my song,
I shyly meet
this paper with my pen,
And quietly
pray my rhyming goes not long,
Nor makes me
small next to some other men.
I miss your
eyes and their dear diamond gleam
Set deep in
brown and rounded perfectly,
And thy dear
laugh which makes all sadness seem
Unburdened
by thy sweet infinity.
That mirth
will sooth my bruised and aching heart
When next I
hear it sounding in my ear,
And such
dear thoughts in each and every part
Maintains my
joy until you next are near.
I wake to
see thee clearly in my skies
And sleep to
dream so sweetly of your eyes.
II
I saw her
step with grace into the street,
Adorned in
blue cascading like her hair.
How nimbly
she did skip on her bare feet:
The very
incarnation of what’s fair.
She took me
breathless in her gentle gaze,
And my young
heart heard a cacoph’nous peace.
It found out
love in numerous different ways,
And ne’er in
adoration did it cease.
How true
that moment was: both fierce and raw.
That
youthful quickness did not dare to lie.
Elder eyes
do disbelieve what they saw,
But faith in
it will let the memory fly.
The truth of
youth within us doth remain.
Its ecstasy
will e’er be ours to claim.
III
I wonder, if
we’d known what time we had,
Would we have
treated those last days the same?
Would we
have strived to make each other glad,
Not left
grim misery to make its name?
If we with
love had fought for happiness,
Knowing that
our dear time was painful brief,
Perhaps we
would have ‘scaped this tearfulness
And still
possess our joy, and not our grief.
Now all such
thoughts and dreams are in our past,
And nought
but endless questions can remain.
Toward our
future must we hurry fast
And lend
past hopes reluctant, sad disdain?
Though in my
past you were complete delight,
Now, I must
leave thee from my tear-stained sight.
© Jack Blackburn, 12th January 2013
© Jack Blackburn, 12th January 2013
Monday, February 25, 2013
In "Honour" of Shirley Bassey's Oscar Appearance…
Old singers!
They're the ones, the ones that we all know,
Who can't let go.
Once were bold singers
Now they sing, and their crooning leaves us cold:
They're just too old.
Paul McCartney gave you joy for years,
But his Hey Jude now leaves you in tears,
And an old singer's siren-song lingers.
It's the song of death from our dear…
Old Singers!
Producers - beware of their past of gold.
They're just too old.
Elton John's back-catalogue still thrills
But his laryngitis gives us chills.
And Keith Richards' haunting face lingers,
But he's technically dead, unlike most…
Old Singers!
Producers - beware of their past of gold.
They're just too old.
Friday, January 18, 2013
An End of Week Lament
Oh, weariness, thy Friday's trudge at hand,
Waging against the workings of my head;
Your aged rages 'gainst me must not stand.
I'll beat thee soon, but first I must to bed.
© Jack Blackburn, 18th January 2013
Waging against the workings of my head;
Your aged rages 'gainst me must not stand.
I'll beat thee soon, but first I must to bed.
© Jack Blackburn, 18th January 2013
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Mount Caburn
And see as far as eye can see
For haze does bar my vision’s wanted way
For haze does bar my vision’s wanted way
So limiting this grand infinity.
For what I see defies the scope of men:
All sky, all blue, all heights, all earth, all green.
This vista, inspiration to my pen,
Calls forth the life of things unseen.
Dig into the verdant earth.
Exhume the history below.
We stand on memories of utter worth,
On what is lost that we do
wish to know.
© Jack Blackburn 12th January 2013
New Sonnet
I
This glorious sunrise is our reward,
Coldly blazing across Jan’ry sky.
Its light pierces as t’were a silver sword
But, in reflection, cheers and warms the eye.
The canopy above is burnt from grey
Red flames awake and colour the morning.
The heart is quicken’d by this break of day
Both tremulous and stirred by its dawning.
Come the end, when sun and fire diminish,
We sigh, and bid the ember’d orb farewell;
For, out of light, our hopes travails must finish
And in out rest their burg’ning bloom must dwell.
But new days sparked under that greatest fire
Rekindle us so that we ne’er may tire.
Coldly blazing across Jan’ry sky.
Its light pierces as t’were a silver sword
But, in reflection, cheers and warms the eye.
The canopy above is burnt from grey
Red flames awake and colour the morning.
The heart is quicken’d by this break of day
Both tremulous and stirred by its dawning.
Come the end, when sun and fire diminish,
We sigh, and bid the ember’d orb farewell;
For, out of light, our hopes travails must finish
And in out rest their burg’ning bloom must dwell.
But new days sparked under that greatest fire
Rekindle us so that we ne’er may tire.
© Jack Blackburn, 12th January 2013
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Upon the Bow
A breath of
wind on the air,
Caressing canvas
and cooling sun.
Beautiful
peace, tremulous on the edge of the horizon.
That light
of total, unmarked clarity.
A young man’s
eyes, piercing blue mirrors of the sky,
Gaze upon a
beautiful nothing –
A nothing
that holds everything in its emptiness.
For one day
he shall see the clear void break.
And before
that, all that is still and rhythmic
Will change
and, in torrent and gale and thunder,
Youth will
discover itself anew,
In fear and
fascination; in sadness and serenity.
Even in that
manchild there –
Whose goal
is an undiscovered fear –
Even with
eyes fixed on the horizon,
He silently says “Don’t look back”.
©
Jack Blackburn, 2nd January 2013
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