Thursday, 11 August 2022

Five Poems by Wendy Webb


 

PECKING CHICKEN FEED 1920s to 2020s

 

My Dad never mentioned growing sunflowers ,just turnips – frozen in the ground, digging hell–

and chickens – his Dad wringing their necks, his Mum plucking –

so I don’t know if he would understand.

He never had to leave home in a hurry,

though he came home from school to a different house, next village,

his stash of pennies in the previous bedroom

(in a gap between the pipes/upstairs)… Perhaps it’s still there,

his boyhood treasure chest? What did Grandad know?

My Mum never mentioned sharing a Fray Bentos pie,

portioned out fairly between all hungry mouths.

The privy was at the end of the yard, in the 2 up 2 down

where a man couldn’t pee without seeing his neighbours gossiping.

The old laundry is online yet, down the Medders (knocked down in the 70s).

I bet Mum went there; as rarely as possible, though it must have been an improvement

on Victorian times.

My Sister knew all about baby-nappies; dropping them down the side

of the sofa; a little reminder of her visit (aged 16); with the baby.

My Brother was too-familiar with old-fashioned wheelbarrows,

a lethal pile of ladders across his path at eye-height.

My Nephew knew all about methadone:

double supplies over the Bank Holiday without support.

Some lessons we live to regret; the young, impulsive have no time

for remorse. Their lives untaught.

My family learnt, over the years, to tell stories…

I am still hearing about sunflowers; and leaving home in a hurry;

while what’s a luxury/what’s essential blanches.

I think – at the top of the list – is life.

            Health.

                        Blue skies, yellow daffodils

and, no disputin’ with everything/everyone else.


 

CAPS, MELODIES AND MOTORBIKES


Hats contain minds,                                         

take black and white cine film back

before end of reel.                                            

 

Sideboards retain memories,

useless as records/cassettes/VHS                       

at house clearances.                                          

 

Melodies refrain hearts’

tunes from a vanquished era

at the end of the dance.                         

 

Your cap, out walking yet,

on grey hair over angled frames,

slow feet. Active age breathes on.                     

 

That sideboard’s packed with 33’s, 45’x,

carefully removed from sleeves:

Johnny Cash.                                                   

 

They’re selling record players again,

sound quality without pain:

revolutions and relationships. Dead.                  

 

No cash/no ration book in sideboard,                 

just ciggies, lighters, paper towels.

Hats/scarves/jackets: nicotine’s scent.   

 

Mind that motorbike rumbling down the road:

whiffs of rare smoke trails,                               

musty caps. Youthful beards and 33’s.   

 

 

FATHER’S DAY 2022-1965

 

I see you every time of day,

though you were old and I was young.

And now?

Father, my father,

you are dying backwards

to that ‘oss ‘n cart,

that pint, that beard,

that cap that never was removed

and, oh, so many wear it now

on the street, then out of sight.

It’s Father’s Day – I sent you,

one year, a card that held mystery:

it said, Nephew…

Do you think, perhaps, that year

you became a Grandad?

Left your motorbike’s piston

on the mantelpiece – as a keepsake;

that year, that glorious year

we were towed onto the Council site

opposite a funfair.

Two whole weeks of heaven -

children unsupervised

                        on Yarmouth seafront.

Those days when it was Great.

Our money ran out Day One;

you got us home to the Midlands

                        Day 14.

Such happy news, to hear

                        I was an Aunty,

so long ago, Dad, when you

were young (but not to me).

In 1965, before you wore a cap.

Before; I needed explanations.

 



WALK TO WEYBOURNE STATION

First published in Coasting Norfolk, Poetry Monthly Press, 2006-09, FBSR

 

Opening the fridge of outdoors,

light simply beams April,

clean-born once more,

before firmly closing door; chill

stings air and cheeks

 

and maybe spring is finally here,

joining daffodils in joyous dance.

We rustle sandwiches and guzzle juice;

picnic packed away.

 

Shrill whistling trails the track.

Whoosh of carriages beneath,

transfigured by dense soot and steam,

to platforms packed in bygone years:

the Seaside Special

clattering to a coastal town

of faded Regency.

 

Tracking back through Sheringham Park,

a Lookout to the fairest English scene

of rolling land and sea and shored up dreams.

Then in the house’s private garden,

gazing down on finest pegged out washing,

round and round, the brightest, pinkest

bloomers ever seen:

a rhododendron dreaming in full bloom.

 

The Temple gives an aspect’s sedate view,

framed picture-postcard seat to grade a house,

enlisting security’s comfort

- yesteryear.

 

But, later, air so thick with silence;

haze barely blocking sun.

Gleam, bouncing fat with promise,

summer’s bluest skies.

Sun shines, at last, to shadows

born anew.

 


DREAMING A NEW DREAM

Poem inspired by Martin Luther King’s famous speech.

First published in Flying to Never Land, Poetry Monthly Press, 2005-11, FBSR

 

I have a dream

that one day no poet will be judged by the colour of their prose

no man will be told where or what to submit

no woman will need to justify success in a women’s only magazine

I have a dream

I have a dream that one day all poets will speak with one voice

none will be asked what form they choose

what bus they ride

who designed the view

I have a dream

 

I have a dream that one day any poet will be free

free to write about the lion lying down with the lamb

about weapons of mass destruction beaten into ploughshares

no-one doubting their originality of thought

asked if they support a modern school

I have a dream

 

I have a dream that every man will hold his brother by the hand

not asking whether his fellow poet is male or female

famous or unknown

published to a higher or lower degree

I have a dream

 

I have a dream that one day poets will speak for everyman

and everyman will be a poet of highest worth

one day a poet will receive coins for his pavement words

a podium for muse pressed tersely between slim pages

a gathering of reporters for his visions of hope

I have a dream

 

I have a dream that the painter and poet and street busker

will gather to perform in the Royal Festival Hall

the Thames flowing faster than crowds over Westminster Bridge

queueing for poems for art for music

like bread on the waters of their lives

       and a little child will lead them all

I have a dream



Wendy Webb: Born in the Midlands, home and family life in Norfolk. She edited Star Tips poetry magazine 2001-2021. Published in Indigo Dreams, Quantum Leap, Crystal, Envoi, Seventh Quarry) and online (Littoral Magazine, Autumn Voices, Wildfire Words, Lothlorien, Meek Colin), she was placed First in Writing Magazine’s pantoum poetry competition. She devised new poetry forms (Davidian, Magi, Palindromedary); wrote her father’s biography, ‘Bevin Boy’, and her own autobiography, ‘Whose Name Was Wit in Waterr’ (title inspired by Keats’ grave in Rome). She has attempted many traditional forms and free verse. Favourite poets: Dylan Thomas, Gerard Manley Hopkins, John Burnside, John Betjeman, the Romantic Poets (especially Wordsworth), George Herbert, William Blake, Emily Dickinson, Mary Webb, Norman Bissett, William Shakespeare, the Bible, and the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.

 

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