Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Scribblers on the move: Shock horror


 View from The Boat House in the Marina and below the building in question with its large terrace.


It is the most unbelievable news, that our home of almost a year, the Look and Sea Centre has closed suddenly and been out into the hands of administrators. The whole of the Harbour Lights Café complex was closed at the end of day without warning it seems. At 5.30pm on Friday August 31st less than a week after our last poetry group get together in the meeting room upstairs. Everybody has had the same reaction to the news when they hear of it, which is generally an exclamation of “But it’s always packed”. And indeed it was. It seems however that the restaurant being full every moment of the day was not enough to save the entire complex that spreads over three floors.
We have been happy using the meeting room for all the meeting of our first year as a group a I was thrown into a bit of a flap realising that I must try to find a new venue quickly, well at least before our next meeting. I read in the local paper that Julie Fear who is the owner of another busy restaurant in the town,  had offered any displaced parties a home at The Boat House in the Marina. I emailed Julie as soon as I heard to ask if that was correct. Over the course of a couple of weeks I have been in to The Boat House and had talks with Julie who is happy for us to make a few booking and see how it pans out. It is a real pain in the neck for a number of reasons, including for me, that all the nice glossy cards I had printed are now totally redundant.


I have had some more printed that just show my contact details but not the venue just in case things don’t work out, though I hope to goodness we will settle there. The other point is that I have reverted to the original name of ‘Scribblers’ for the group since the change to ‘The Harbour Lights Poets’ was so short lived. Doomed maybe, I never was happy with that name change.
Like any move, there are a number of things to consider. Firstly and importantly, that although we have been invited to make the place our new home, that there is not the luxury of quiet private room as we had enjoyed Look and Sea. This would mean that other people taking tea or a coffee and cake or a full meal, will come and go whilst we read to each other giving us the chance to see how we will take to being beginner performance poets. EEEEK! Scary stuff. Who knows, the clients may like it and many we will too, in the fullness of time, as all our quite dreadful politicians say to glibly.
Well cutting to the chase, I have booked several dates and all we can do, is give the idea a chance. It is also a lovely position, right in the Marina looking out at the River Arun as we did before, but from the west bank of the river this time. 


There is plenty of parking there and no meters either. That's me above on a bike ride visit.
It is possible to walk there from the town via the foot bridge by the Arun View pub close to the station. The Marina entrance is adjacent to the foot bridge. You can also drive there easily enough. From the roundabout at Tesco’s, you carry on over the road bridge in the direction of Bognor Regis but take the first turning on the left, which turns sharply back toward the river again as if heading for the foot bridge from the west side or as you would do to go to West Beach or the golf course. Then just before the foot bridge, you turn left into the Marina area and continue toward the building that is The Boathouse. Most of us have been loads of times though in our case it was usually on our bikes.
The Boat House has a great menu for breakfast lunch or afternoon tea. The coffee and cakes are all excellent too. This meeting will be our first birthday celebration so I am hoping and praying that as many as possible of you will come and try to make a big success of our big move. There will be cake.


 An exciting new path, where will it lead us

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Harbour Lights Poetry: group news


                                                  Isle of Wight, Pier to Pier swim.                            
                                                                                                          

Our alarm rang at 5.20am, sadly waking me from the best sleep I had had in quite a while. I opened one eye and muttered that it couldn’t be morning because it was still dark. Maybe I was bird in another life and only feel fit to wake when dawn makes at least a little effort to crack just before the dreaded bedside klaxon. The only thing that saves the clock from an unhappy end is that my husband keeps the noisy critter on his bedside cabinet distant from any violence from my direction.

We got ourselves down to the sea front to meet our friends in the swimming pool car park for the planned 6.30am sea swim, but, I started the ball rolling in the wrong direction by saying that it was too cold and dreary for me, and that I was going in the pool for my swim. It was very overcast, and the tide was not fully in so there might be a bit of wading before you could swim. My excuse was that I was too long in the tooth to get very cold, mentioning that it was after getting very cold at this time last year that I ended up with Pneumonia. I don’t want to be pampered but I don’t want to be just plain old stupid either.

Once the wall of will started to crumble the rest of the group didn’t take long to do the same as me and slope into the pool instead. A bit of sunshine might have made all the difference. Once in our swim lanes we did all get a good work out and were comforted by that. Steve ( Coach/Husband) had to get off to work to meet a delivery, but told me to be ready to go out on our bikes a little later in the morning, which we did, so in the end a useful swim and a bike ride made us feel better about our training.

 
For me this is a slightly scary time of year as gradually the sun moves away and the days become shorter. I do not enjoy the lack of light in the winter months and I get accused of being a S.A. D. subject. I have to agree with that I suppose but there are other things that almost make up for the lengthening on the nights. The night sky is a wonder that regularly gives me a touch on neck ache and I have learned to stop and stare rather than bowl on and trip over any hazard available.

I do miss Orion during the summer time but he, like Arnold Schwarzenegger’s  sci-fi character,  will be back,  spear poised raging across the sky, the most noticeable, best known of all the constellations.  Then we can look for Sirius the Dog Star yapping at his master’s feet as they take their long winter journey.

Sweet Sirius

You stop my heart, it skips a beat
You are a star of stars elite
Brilliant, flashing, huge blue star
Clearest, brightest heavenly Tsar
Dominating others less in sight
Admiration doth your flame requite

Peaceful Pursuits

High on the list of things to be done
When not at work, waiting for lunch at one,
Not busy getting meals and slaving all day,
There never is the time to go out and play.
Dream of this then, to calm your self down
Slow your breathing; get rid of the frown.
Walking barefoot on the sand at low tide
Wearing loose clothes, the body sins hide.
Glide into the sparkle at the waters edge
Hoik up you your pants and give this pledge;
I will take time at least once in a while,
To stand alone on the beach and smile.

The next meeting of the Harbour Lights scribblers group is this coming Sunday
August 26th at 2pm.
If anybody is reading about this for the first time, please let your curiosity lead you to us. We can be found in the upstairs meeting room above the Harbour Lights Café at the Look and Sea Centre alongside the lovely River Arun in Littlehampton. There is a small pay car park behind the lifeboat station or the town car park is only five minutes walk away.

The  café kindly set iced water and glasses in the room for us or you can buy a pot of tea or what ever  other drink you might prefer and bring it up on a tray yourself, there is plenty of room.  


All are welcome to come in and join us just to listen and comment if you wish or to bring anything you have written that you might like to read to the group or indeed if you have a poem that you have heard on ‘Poetry Please’ or maybe read in a book from the library, please bring it along.
We are a warm friendly group and will be pleased to meet any newcomers.

Ring me with any questions: 
Mobile: 07990 803274

Daphne Belt


Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Holiday time and meetings





Harbour Lights Poets (ride again).

Time to remind our friends that the next meeting of the Harbour Lights poets will be on Sunday 29th of July.  For the sake of any new guests to our group we gather at 2pm in the meeting room above the Harbour Lights Café at the Look and Sea centre, by the beautiful River Arun in Littlehampton. West Sussex. For more info, email: dafbelt@outlook.com

Everybody is welcome, watchers and listeners are just as warmly invited as poets and writers of any level, in fact we love to encourage, help or advise and greet beginners or just sit and lap up more experienced visiting poets work. Please do join us for a couple of hours.

Steve, Anthony Towers and I have been on a swimming and hiking holiday in Reifnitz on the Wörtersee in Austria, where the surroundings are stunningly, breathtakingly scenic and inspiring.
Looking toward the mountains in Slovenia from our table at dinner last night

A Hike in Austria

Taking what was less than a path uphill
just after breakfast with some time to kill,
needing to shake holiday sloth away
Crank up the limbs to work more than just play.
Rising sharply from the village below
Into thick woodland where dark shadows grow.
A deer leapt, the flash of furry rust red
of his flanks as through sunlight he sped.
A mountain stream spat the tiniest frog
who crawled up a leaf and on to a log,
through trees we saw a marvellous vista
turquoise lake surface of sparkling glister.
Give thanks to fortune to have such a life,
hand in hand fondly, a husband and wife.



Mouse Mountain

A mountain side cowshed turned
into a chic hotel conversion.
From fancy brochure we learned
funky individuality emersion.

Each room furnished
by a well known designer
wall art, coffee table
and smooth leather recliner.

The trendy restaurant serves
Dishes, artistic yet regional,
wide reaching and international
wine list and fruit that was seasonal.

The vast buffet breakfast presents
Swiss delicacies and specialities
Experienced staff that were fluent
in languages for all nationalities.

Early morning breakfasters
were it seemed, few on the ground.
On that morning just one other
couple entered, glancing around.

They strolled to the far end and
he sat down with his back to the wall,
she took the seat opposite, facing him.
She looked in and he could see all.

Between our two tables appeared
the furriest mouse I ever saw
lush mountain coat, a comic appearance
fur coated mice in such places are law.

Insects and rodents don’t bother me
but watching her husband’s eyes….
Turned to see what it was he saw;
She screamed, blood curdling cries.

She kept on bellowing her alarm
skirt held tight climbed on a chair
I turned to face my other half
he went and hid by the buffet there.

The manager apologised to the lady
who was still distraught by that.
He brought a mousetrap and the cat;
Placed them both near to where she sat.

That couple left the hotel soon after
leaving behind the horror of the house.
On my dessert plate that evening was
a huge ice cream with a marzipan mouse.


Tuesday, June 19, 2018

An Enforced Break




Hello to you all,

Sorry things went a bit quiet, but the day after the last meeting at the Harbour Lights Café
 I fell off my bike during a training session and spent the rest of the day in A & E at Worthing Hospital. The X-Ray showed that I had broken both my Ulna and Radius in my left arm.
Since I was told that they were compacted, I was subjected to an experience much like being put on the rack, to try to pull the bones out and into line again. I wasn’t wild about that. 
It involved one doctor holding my arm just below the elbow and the senior doctor hauling the lower part and further stretching the hand using his thigh as a lever. Final stages shown here.



They put a three-quarter cast on the arm leaving room for the expected swelling. It did swell and turn all shades of purple. Anyway I am still in plaster, a complete pretty purple one now,
but hope to be cut out of it in a few weeks.

However I am still managing to get a little training done.
I am doing a brisk walk pretty much daily and a turbo training at home.
This is with the added use of a couple of big cushions over my handle bars.
I can type using my right hand, and the index finger of the left hand 
which is not as stiff as the others digits.
Meeting your first Alien

Last evening I saw my husband chatting to our next door neighbours at the rear of our garage.
They are a lovely young couple with a little boy of pre-school age, soon to have his 4th birthday
After a few moments Steve came into the house to get me and told me that little Héctor wanted to see my broken arm, if I wouldn’t mind; they had stopped by to ask how I was.
I went out and was greeted by the little boy’s look of complete astonishment.
He had never heard of such a thing, let alone seen anybody he knew with an arm set in a plaster cast. He eyed the purple fingers and the bruises around my elbow with amazement. 
“Does it hurt Daf” he asked.
I told him that it did hurt a bit but that it felt better since the Doctors at the hospital mended it
 and put it in the plaster until it was OK again.
He looked bewildered, so I knocked the plaster so that he could hear the funny noise it made.
His big brown eyes widened even further, he looked from my face to the plaster and back several times. I invited him to knock to see how hard it was.
He clenched his little fist and did a sample soft knock and then tried a slightly louder one.
His mother took him by the other hand and moved to leave prompting the little boy said
 “What have you come to say to Daf Héctor”?
“Get well soon Daf”, he said, still looking as though he had met his first alien.
He waved goodbye to me as he was walked away into his own garden.
He is such a cute little guy, bless him, I thought, bless his little heart.
The pure wonderment of children!
I have taken a few acupuncture appointments at Harmony Acupressure in Chichester, that seems to have helped with the bruising and swelling as well as my stress levels. A very peaceful treatment.

 The date of my latest accident was five years almost to the day

 since I had a fall whilst out running on holiday in Italy.
That time was worse, since there was also a broken foot to cope with and lacerations.
The poems and story below were written then telling of my difficulties and about my first outing a few days after doing that. 
On that occasion as now I told myself that my broken bones would heal themselves in the fullness of time and held that in my mind.  There are thousands of people who are much worse off than me. People lose limbs through accidents or acts of war and terrorism, mine is in the light of that thought simply a temporary inconvenience. This is the incredible Rudy Garcia Tolsen pictured here at a half Ironman triathlon this summer.


Ups & Downs
Missing my training
Life’s not the same
It’s not even raining
Temporarily lame
Six weeks is a lifetime
Nothing is fun
Not even bath time
Is easily done
The gardens a mess
Can’t get to grips
Left handed trowel-ing
Got any tips
Dust bunnies hiding
All over indoors
Our house is filthy
The shelves and the floors
Doing my bra up
Some clothes I can’t wear
Even lifting a cup
Isn’t easy my dear
Two weeks more
Not so much longer
What I hope for
Is soon to be stronger
Life’s ups and downs
Soon come and go
The strength to get through it
Is what I must show. 

The Pyjama Game
Chichester Festival Theatre
Minerva
Starring
Hadley Fraser
Seats G56-57
May 23rd 2013
A game indeed
Seats booked months ahead
They sold at the speed of light
Hadley had been Raoul
In ‘Phantom’ previously
I looked forward to it so
Then I was set in plaster
There’d been a fall you see
I wasn’t going to miss it
But how was I to go?
Wild horses wouldn’t stop me
Now it would not be easy
That, it could not be
I called the theatre
Got them on the phone
A few days ahead
Told them of my plight
To find out about seats
It had not mattered when I booked
That my seats were at the back so high
Manager and receptionist checked location
And told me with a sigh
I should come in early
And they would help me to my seat
The Minerva is so neat
For me the very best
But it’s just a bloody bank of stairs
Swirly almost in a circle
No such thing as a bad seat
On the front row
Actors are at your feet
In the top back row you still see all
Getting to our seats
Would be a labour of love
The theatre assistant was most helpful
Drive up to the door she said
And plant me just inside
My husband then could park the car
And I would not have to go too far
It was an effort and a half
Hobbling up to where we’re sitting
The theatre empty at that time
No coming out again at half time
Once settled with my programme
And lots of time to read it through
So I could see who would be who
Soon after the house lights faded
And the first songs were rendered
I realised a new handicap of mine
And this one hurt in quite another way
Couldn’t clap my hands
At songs divinely sung
Could not even wave my arms
Well at least the good one
It would look like something else
My crutch behind my seat was bunged
Could not even tap that down
Being entertained so well but then
Worth all the painful twinges
I’d do the same again. 


I would like to let you know that I have booked the last Sunday in July, August and September for our next meetings. There is not a June meeting due to holidays.
July 29th
August 26th
September 29th
Please make a not in you diaries.
As ever but nobody has ever taken me up on this.
 Please send me anything you might like included in the next news message

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Weapon of Choice





Weapon of Choice:

Next meeting of Harbour Lights Poets will be Sunday 27th of May at 2pm as usual in the meeting room at the Look and Sea Centre above the Harbour Lights Café. My email: dafbelt@outlook.com

Much as I would most often prefer to sit and write when I am at home alone, ‘Poetrising’, as my husband calls it when I sit scribbling away on my own, it was a warm day for a change and I grasped the nettle in more ways than one, taking the opportunity to tidy up out little back garden.

Starting with the Daffodils that had past their most glorious stage, and had finished flowering. All that was left of them was a mess of floppy green leaves. The bedding plants; Geraniums, Petunias, Antirrhinums, and Sweet Peas were all still on the polystyrene boxes, looking as though they were suffering grade A. Pot-bound-itis.

I had pulled lots of the pots forward and had been working on the garden table to save my back from too much bending over. I didn’t want to find that I was not able to ride my bike the next day due to unaccustomed labour. There were several metal pots that did not have draining holes at their base and over winter they had become smelly, soggy, muddy messes and the flowers that were in them when they were bought; Tulips, had suffered from the soaking and completely rotted. They were beyond saving. There weren’t that many of the offending pots and I set about looking for a tool or two that I could get the job done with, without having to wait for Steve to come home and do it for me, when he had been working all day and would want to sit down, have a cup of tea and catch up on the news.


The club hammer was easy to locate in my husbands tool box and a further search through drill bits chisels and other smaller items, brought just the thing to light, a big-ish centre punch. Then having emptied of the mushy goo I set about making a few holes in the bottom of the planters that I need to use.  It wasn’t as easy as I would have thought but I had put some thick gloves to protect my hands,  and set about the job in hand, how hard could it be?

I heard our door bell chime loudly through the open kitchen door. Steve had ordered a new Bar-b-que to replace the old wrecked one, from Amazon and had told me to watch out for the van and man since there was an email declaring that the item was out for delivery.


A few steps through our little cottage took me to the front door and I opened it with a clatter, club hammer in one hand and centre punch in the other. The deliver guy took several steps backwards from the step exclaiming “Whoa Mrs, who you expecting, ‘Annibal Lecter or summick”? He had climbed over our front wall (No, there isn’t a front gate) and had set the heavy looking package down on the pathway before I opened the door. I put down my tools and asked him to just stand the box in the hall for me and added “Please” and a smile, since he was still looking at me in a funny way. He suggested that I should stand back because it was heavy but hoiked the thing up and stood it just inside the front door, I had to squeeze around it to go to sign for the delivery, I scribbled an H and a scrawly L but he didn’t notice and nobody can read those things anyway.

Not more than a few moments after I had got back to my gardening chores, a regular workman that we use for odd household problems, bowled in through the garage at the back into the garden where he found me sitting on a plastic stool, still bearing the same tools that had given the delivery guy such a start. Just one step back this time, because this man had known me for a number of years. “Jesus Daphne, WTF are you doing with a club hammer?

I indicated first to the pot and explained “No draining holes”. Then the centre punch and then the club hammer and a short mime, before saying that I was not aware of any restrictions on girls using tools!

Having put the tools down and stepped toward the kitchen to turn the kettle on to make tea, I turned to see my husband, home early, stepping through the garage and into the mess of pots and plants. He spotted the club hammer lying on the ground and became the third man in half an hour to question my ability to do a simple job for myself.

“What ARE you doing with my club hammer”?
“Well, for a start, think it was my dad’s club hammer, though, due to our marriage, I suppose it could be deemed ‘Our’ club hammer, one of our ‘Worldly goods’”. I went on to say that I did not know that I had to pass a test to use it.

Steve made the holes in the rest of the pots that I indicated, but still giving me a levelling look and later on I told him that I might lay claim to it. It obviously had some magical power, since three normal looking workmen, had all found something new and a little bit scary in me when holding the said tools.

As a bit of a scribbler, I am well aware that poets and writers have long claimed that the pen is mightier that the sword but nobody ever took a few steps back from me when I stood with gel pen in my hand as they had done that day when I brandished my new weapon of choice.
 
Pen versus Sword

The Pen, so it is said, is mightier than the sword.
Yet ever since this was said, the assertion has been in dispute.
Support is split in the hundreds of cartoons, posters, tee shirts,
mugs and caps.

Sword v Pen

Literally, we all know it to be untrue.
Were the two weapons put to the test.
An arm would be cut off, and the pen would fall from the severed limb.
The hulk holding the sword would claim victory and march off
waving his blood dripping weapon.
The writer would quickly bleed to death.

Pen v Sword

On the other hand, (pardon the pun), intelligent people can write stirring stuff, get themselves lodged in high places, change laws, start rebellions,
and sway those in power and have ignorant, violent monsters locked away.

Wield or Yield

This question still stands. as we see in the school playground,
where the bully can still rule.
Yet very often the bullying is done with words:
Spiteful things said, threats on Facebook and text messages.
Quill or blade can strike with equal cruelty.
An accurate, articulate word or a murderous swing of the sword.
Both decidedly deadly.

                                      Painting by our talented cousin Sally Hoolican-Cooper


Sunday, April 15, 2018

Mixed Blessings



 Wood Anemones on Angmering Park Estate Woodlands

With spring, sort of easing more into early summer, I always start to feel livelier. I am not a good do-er in winter as the farming community say. There is no denying that I am much happier in summer with more light and warmer weather about. We are also into wedding season and I have two reasons to mention this. 


One is that my friend Michelle Chittenden (who has made a couple of visits to our poetry group meetings) ‘s daughter Chelcie, who along with her fiancée Matt were recently in the local papers because having been turned away from hospital after checking in with rapid contractions: then immediately delivered her own sweet baby Zahra at home as soon as they got indoors! What a drama but the excitement in the family does not end there because. Matt and Chelcie then a couple of weeks later, won a wedding competition on Spirit FM Radio worth £15,00.00 (Yes fifteen thousand pounds). They are now in a position to name the day and not have to wonder where all the money would be coming from, so very well done and many congratulations to the happy couple on their mixed blessings. They were also to be heard on Spirit FM Radio talking about it. You can find that broadcast for a while on the Spirit FM website on the afternoon show. 3-7pm I think it was.




The other reason for bringing spring weddings into the chat is that my photographer daughter Jacqueline Rackham gave me a challenge/stroke, my very first commission when she asked me to write a light humoured poem that could be used to ask the over enthusiastic congregation not to spoil all the best shots as they snapped away with their mobile phones. My immediate and first response to the plea is this poem below: I did offer the change anything that she did not like, and she responded that she liked it but it was too long. At that point I thought it might be a good idea to throw this challenge out to everybody on our group email list and indeed the blog page. Please feel free to send your own idea’s for Jakki. Rik; perhaps this is one for you since you do like a bit of humour and have a way with words that send the corners of the mouth retreating in the cheeks of our amused faces. Please all have a think about this as an idea for next weeks meeting on Sunday 22nd
 
 
Mixed Blessings

The long awaited and worked for wedding day
for which they diligently saved up all their pay,
should be the happiest day of their life
when they wait to be husband and wife.

This day is theirs when two hearts connect
And we should give them all of our respect.
Let us think about them walking down the aisle
setting our own needs aside just for a while.

They’re paying a professional to record each minute
The perfect photograph: NOT WITH YOUR ARM IN IT!
Take your own snaps on your mobile phone
but don’t spoil this special day for your own

satisfaction in your rush to take a shot,
that it is their day, you momentarily forgot.
Bide your time for later on when it’s clear
you won’t spoil the day for those you hold dear.

Hold back your happy but forceful enthusiasm
or twix your love and them may form a chasm.
A quick thoughtless action from yourself
might cast a shadow on the living room shelf.

Let them have this special day’s recollection
Keep mobile phone hidden beyond detection.

Thank you.


For those among us who frequent our beautiful woods one a year maximum just the see the Bluebells in their full glory, I have to point out that the photos here today were taken on the Angmering Park Estate woodlands just south of the Monarchs Way but the Wood Anemones are rife right now and will only last for viewing until the bluebells completely overwhelm them as they always do. They are a vision and do for all the world look like a very light late dusting of snow.

Wooden Enemies

My husband thought this was what I had said
For some years he thought this correct.
My ear did not discern that he’d missed the thread
That he had filed it in his head so defect.

It was when I pointed to his disbelief
During a tramp thru’ a patch in a woody bank
How you see they are anemones by the leaf
He claimed I had a point and to me he’d thank.

Then it was when he confessed his mistake;
For ‘Wooden Enemies’ he thought was their name,
For so many years, he laughed, for goodness sake!
It all made sense Wood Anemone sounds the same.

What indeed is in a name as was said of old?
Aren’t they just a pretty with either brand?
They’ll still show their star to sunshine bold
And close the bell when evening is at hand

 Zahra

Zooming fearlessly into the world to delight
A light weight at five pounds and ounces, five.
However she has shown she is up for a fight
Ready to spread her joy that she’s alive.
Appearing a pretty and strong little mite.

Zahra knows to make an entry with style 
A girl in a big hurry to join the party
Hastens to stamp her mark with a smile
 Rushing to greet us with a welcome hearty.
As delivered by Mum in life’s first trial.

Friday, March 16, 2018

Poetry at the Harbour Lights Café: Meeting No. 6




This message is well overdue and I do send you all my apologies for that.
I have been completely snowed under with all sorts of things that have had to come before poetry I’m afraid. One of the worst things about winter is as we all know that not only are there more nasty bugs and illnesses about but there seem to be more people shuffling off this mortal coil.

There is a funeral on Monday of a cousin of mine and only this week my daughters Jakki’s mother-in-law died suddenly. The death of my cousin caused a flurry of contact from several of my other cousins, who because we are scattered apart, I had not been in contact with since the last family funeral about a year ago.

This is basically just to remind everybody that the next meeting at the Look and Sea meeting room above the Harbour Lights Café is booked for Sunday week March 25th. Hopefully everybody is looking forward to that as much as I am.

Still, spring is springing up all around us and my tiny little garden has pots full of tiny Tête-à-tête, competing with Tulips, Violets and Pansies that are a lovely contrast to all the horribly depressing news of late. The only good thing about this time of year is that there are loads of good movies to go and see thanks to the Academy Awards and good old Oscar,
compared to summertime when there is a glut of animated family films for the holidays.


 
The little poem here is the result of badly missing our next door neighbours of twenty years who returned early last summer to the small town in the Alsace, where they lived before their move to England. I had been finding it strange that the beautiful red Camellia that peeps over the six foot brick into our garden, has been so very late to flower this year and being a bundle of emotion and imagination myself, I had got it into my head that even their garden flowers and the family of Blackbirds and the Sparrows that reside in the big Camellia have been missing them as much as I have. They are both musicians (The people that is, not the blackbirds) and I have even missed the scales they practiced every afternoon on their saxophones. Our new neighbours are not at all friendly as yet. So this is to Christine and Jan who also ran, walked and swam regularly at all the same places as Steve and I. It was Christine who painted the portrait of me that hangs by my desk and is the subject of a previously read poem of mine,  Portrait of my Soul.

Red Camellia

Peaking over the high garden wall
showing no fear of winter yet unfinished,
surviving through to spring from fall
her strength and beauty undiminished.

Breaking buds like crimson velvet
changing to wonderful deep pink flower
above our wall shows a flashy pelmet
glows thru’ afternoon sunlight hours.

Thank heaven for Mother Nature’s gift
bursting forth despite the cold,
that brings a smile and spirits lift,
born of winter, this colour bold.

I usually mention that if you have a poem that you would like share with the group that I will happily put it on the next blog page. So far though, nobody has taken me up on this offer. Hope to see you all well and happy and free of germs at the next meeting.
 
Saxophones’
 Through the Dividing Wall

Terrace houses may not be ideal
walls are thin and some people moan,
yet there are  benefits I feel
especially when at home alone.
There is a pleasure sweet and real
music floats through on a saxophone,
musician’s next door is such a deal,
practicing scales in a melodic drone.
A home with built in concert appeal
lifts me as I type or answer the phone
pretty waltz as thru chores I reel
cares have through the window flown.

Contact email: dafbelt@outlook.com