Category Archives: Poetry

Whaleshead

(A poetic tale written with a bit of Scottish parlance)

Have ye not known the tale of
The Whaleshead? A black awful time
It was — gripped by such a dread fright —
When a raging sea, wroth with hunger, stole
Near a hunner or two more a sad sorry souls
And sent um down, a-feared and a-shriekin,
To Davie Jones afore their time.

Aye …
The bleakest of times it was –

And it came in of a sudden,
This bitter blustering thing,
Rumblin low and a-moanin –
As a fair bonnie woman in moil –
Stroking all the senses daft, this
Portend black of billowing clouds,
Bearing down on the shore bitter
With a sharp-set iciness that bit
Fiercely at the skin like the
Teeth of Serpents

Oh laws how it roared and
Carried on; that perishin cold sleet
As sure as death freezin the hair stiff —
We were aghast at the shear sight of it,
And dinnae know our future near;
Nature up in a snuff and the waves
Dancin high with windy fingers,
Pullin up the bones of wizards
And warlocks and things –

“Save our souls,” was the cry
Of those in the way of harm —
“Hoot toot,” was the sneer of
Those smug at a distance …

And a dread sight it was;
This loathy tempest; pit-mirk
The sea and the ramping waves –
Oh a prospect compelling the mind
Awful with the rumble of destruction;
A dire muckle of hopelessness that
Held the bones and heart in the
Callous fingers of chance –

“Please help us,” was the cry
Of those in the way of harm —
“Hoot toot,” the rejoinder was of
Those aloof and smug at a distance …

There was nary measure of time;
Day and night fluxing together in a
Black swirl of clouds and thunderous
Mayhem, and all the while the tempest
Brooding barmy on the hapless town and
Outlying vessels; shriekin hell like banshees

‘Most a fortnight it lasted –
A short fortnight, minus three –
Tearin the soul outa any strong man;
Razing cottages and taverns and busting
The mizzen from many a sea-worthy vessel;
Most of um breached or broke up like kindlin,
And most all the God fearing townsfolk
Begging desperate fur Duns Scotus –

“God will save us,” was the
Cry of those with the strong faith —
“Hoot toot,” was the answer from
Those at a safe distance …

A hideous time it was, one
That left pocks on me soul. And now
When the clap-o-thunder fits me bereft,
And the heart cries out in the blackest of
Despair, I can still see all those poor souls
Lammin desperate in a shit-mucklety tomb.
No …ne’er in my life will I ever forget the
Whaleshead, and ne’er, ever, of a surety,
Will I forget those souls that passed on …

A Soothsayer's Rune

A bard misplaced in time

Paints portraits in moist soil

And buries dreams in cloth

As sky glows evening blue

And black crows caw from wing.

 

Night veils its secret thoughts

In mist within the grove

Unto which she is drawn

To enter a portal

To the forgotten side.

 

Warm breezes brush her knees

At fringe of thin tunic

As old minstrel poets

Recite prophetic verse

From atop ancient hill.

 

Seers among Willows

Read omens in white clouds

As Druid voices rise

In Oracles’ music

Beneath a healing moon.

 

Hooded cloaks fall away

As hands join in circle

Where dancing arbiters

Lost in their augury

Call forth admonition:

 

“Seek truth beneath great Oak,

But sleep must not befall

There under the Yew Tree

Else dreams in distortion

Shall call death upon thee.”

 

Thus, she died as foretold

Reborn in unity –

A solstice of Self through

Consecrated visions

Dreamt under Tree of Life.

 

© 2008

The Lost Scent of Orange Blossoms

I grew up in

Southern California

Where my family

Ate home cooked

Meals together.

That world died

A horrible, slow death.

Murdered

Like in a horror movie

A corporate hit job.

Bulldozers and chain saws

Killed it and

Dragged the corpses off

Without a trial.

The replacements were

Televisions,

Fast food,

Video games,

Internet;

Reality shows.

Back in that magical,

Childhood kingdom

Where kids cultivated imaginations

There was an orange grove

Across the street.

The tree man

In kaki pants

And black boots said

We could have

The ones on the ground.

My rule of thumb was simple:

Squat and look for kaki pants.

There’s nothing sweeter

Than untouched

Whale sized oranges

Knocked off a tree

With a stick.

Suck juice from naval first.

The groves

Became strip malls,

Cloned houses,

Condos;

Grade schools.

The fresh air

Turned purple

The dirt covered

With dead

Streets and parking lots.

Those orange trees

Tore their roots

From the ground and

Migrated south of the border

Without a visa

Thinking of cheap labor

And short-term profits.

No wonder a couple of kids

Went nuts at Columbine.

Dreaming South

reflecting new-born lust wanderer the lover

sucks the new illusion another mile of country road

dancing his sight with cornfields and soft destroyed broken light 

the sky will burn and Friday night is far away for blond girls

and easy rides and summer rain drive- in kisses

diaphanous mythical women with marble torsos

and suns and golden red blue rivers of lilies and goat’s rings

or am i dreaming in south of Texas or south of Greece

mixing the holy wines and climb the steps like erotic vines

my essence lighter it becomes with joy

or is it a mid-summer”s dream a mere narcotic ploy

Precious

Today is the day that you were born
My precious baby.
Today is the day that you were born.
My precious girl.

I don’t know what star I wished upon
My precious baby.
I don’t know what star I wished upon
My precious girl

But my wish has come true
My precious baby.
But my wish has come true
My precious girl.

Because now I’ve got you
My precious baby.
Because now I’ve got you.
My precious girl.

(Written on my daughter’s fifth birthday.)

The Gift of Reason

Sadly, it seemed

Everything she had accepted as truth

Could no longer sustain her. Shattered, her life lay in

Ruins. If only she had had

Enough wisdom to

Think before opening her mouth… for

She now knew there were those things better left unsaid

Does It Matter

Does it matter
That I’m from
A different place
Though born
In the same nation?
That my influences
Are sun and sea
And the strictness of West Indian life
Not the cold grey laxity of the British way?

Does it matter
That I learned
A brighter grammar
And the Queen’s so-called English
That I went to school
And stayed in school
That I don’t smoke
And hardly drink
But can still have a good time?

Does it matter
That my skin’s
A different colour?
Though my thoughts
Are much the same,
You’ll never know,
Repelled by external differences.

Does it matter?
It obviously
Matters
To you.