LONG WINTER
Oh look – the solar garden lamp
Reveals how far the world has
turned -
It’s brighter, now the spring draws
near?
And I should be more cheerful now
To see, beneath its hat of cells,
Within its jar,
A blue light - like a bottled star.
But all the stars are cold tonight,
The wind is bitterly cold tonight
And snowflakes cross the moaning
air,
And there’s a whisper on the breeze
Which tells me spring is far away,
And I still fear
That spring will come, but not this
year,
Not this year.
THE PROMISE OF
YOUR MOUTH
Your harlot’s mouth and eyes like
wells of grey,
Your jiggling bum; your shy, too
brief embrace,
Your copper hair, – that blush upon
your face,
Your rider’s waist, – such grace!
What can I say?
Don’t toy with me! I’m sick and
tired of play,
Of disappointments in your secret
place -
The promise of your mouth, your
eyes of grey,
Your jiggling bum; your shy, too
brief embrace.
Madonna – mercy! - grant me
all this day;
Where fire and thought agree,
there’s no disgrace,
And Time, too soon, will take those
charms away -
Your harlot’s mouth and eyes like
wells of grey,
Your jiggling bum; your shy, too
brief embrace.
(Derived from the BM Harley manuscript 682/no 24 – mid
15th century, and itself derived from the French of Charles
d’Orléans.)
EARLY ADVICE
Birth will be strange, but you
shall be with us.
You’ll learn how there are skies
which are not pink
And atmospheres without their soft
restrictions.
I can’t describe the breadth of
raging space
Nor how your eyes will fill with
clouds and stars;
But don’t turn back to mysteries
you know,
Although the dark around you is as
great
As all the night above the wide
Pacific;
You must not fear the loneliness of
seas,
It is enough to journey on a
thought
With just a little lamp to grace
your prow,
A lamp which won’t distract the
drifting gods
Who prize the luminescence of the
squid,
Who only hear the breathing of the
whale.
FOREST
where rough-barked columns follow
you to darkness,
where nothing really whispers in
your mind,
where light will seldom settle on
the tree-fans,
and swept, - the sudden continents
of cloud;
where rowan berries redden with
their curses,
enough, on just one stalk, to
blight a village,
where there are always eyes you
cannot see
and every spin-blown leaf becomes a
moment,
where stillness is a settling of
the needles,
where
falling cones are counted down the silence
AURORA AND THE
LOUT
A shepherd boy too far from home
Could find no rest on tranquil
slopes
And sang to the stars a lover’s
song
For he possessed a lover’s hopes,
Until, at last, the Maid of Dawn
Was stirred from sleep – and
hearing this,
With cheeks aflame she searched the
isle,
To stop his music with a kiss.
She trailed blond hair across his face,
She stroked his skin with golden
hands;
But he forsook the moment’s grace
And dreamed of girls in far-off
lands,
And while his fingers worked the
lyre
He did not guess they played with
fire.
NIGHT-WALKING
The wilderness beyond the path
Is heathland – heather, gorse, and
ferns.
One star draws in above the oak;
The intermittent glow-worm burns.
Few sounds intrude of wheel or
voice…
A moped on a distant road,
Then calling to its absent mate,
The common frog, or common toad.
Revolving moments in its throat -
The nightjar, which can never fail
To make the dark sit up and hear;
A rival to the nightingale,
A pulse beyond sweet melodies,
A churring music - strange and bare
Which wavers through the startled
mind
And seems to bless the midnight
air.
Now nature, sly and often cruel,
Beguiles me with her kinder face
And will not let me hear the
screams
Which rise when fox and rabbit
race,
Until I think no bounding stoat
Will find the reason for its quest;
No skylark keeps a vigil by
The broken eggs and ruined nest.
But, where wild orchids still
endure,
Let all endure and keep the tryst,
Where nightjars calm the troubled
hour
And truth and peace might coexist.
RESTORATION AT
TWILIGHT.
Once a landscape mapped on time
Could not be scarred by human hands
Despite the roads and spreading
towns,
Sacred were those twilight lands -
Which lay as shadows on each day,
Restoring what we feared had
passed,
The endless meadows, wooded hills,
The pond where June might always
last.
I half-believed a thought could
save
Idyllic scenes, or make anew,
Beneath the solemn veils of dusk,
The outlines of a flawless view -
The roofless, ruined Abbey stood
In shadows by the river’s bend
To prove in shade how time endures,
And prove how moments always end -
Enduring cloisters, proof enough
That chanting monks possessed their
age.
I close my eyes to hear them sing;
The rustle of a turning page…
And England is a map of stars,
The clustered streetlamps wink and
glare,
The dead stay dead beneath our
fuss;
Our fly-like buzzing fills the air
–
But oh! - will someone glance our
way,
When twilight covers everything we
are,
And wish to hear, above the still,
The coughing of the petrol car?
Or will they say that we were
cursed
And never thought about our ways;
Will they despise the tat and trash
Which mark the passing of our days?
THE TRAVELLER
(After the Anglo-Saxon elegies, The
Wanderer and the Seafarer)
“Sometimes, a man
is blessed by faith,
and faith attends
his prayer,
although he rows
the exile’s course
through grey,
forbidding winter tides,
and fate is harsh
and fixed.”
So confessed a traveller,
who called to mind the fall of
kings,
the carnage of our conflict.
“Often and alone
I must bemoan my
sorrow,
dawn by dawn.
I know there is no
living friend
to whom I dare
reveal my pain,
break down in
anguish, openly;
and after all, was
I not told
of manly virtues
in restraint,
with sadness like
a secret name?
“I was deprived of
those I loved,
my childhood home
is far away –
so far, I bind my
wounded soul
in fetters of a
failing pride.
In dreams I see my
hearth and home,
where solitude was
but a word
for poet-play, to
please my child,
and no-one sat
alone.
“But come first
light, I’ll leave behind
white sea-birds on
the inlet’s brow;
I’ll feel the bite
of ice and snow,
the keenness of a
chilling spray.
Too long ago, my
kith and kin
were swallowed by
a mouth of clay;
the way to exile
called me then:
vocation of the
freezing rain.
“The cities of our
fathers fell;
my little house,
the place for friends,
became a
playground for the winds.
How shall I plan
eternity
without a roof to
shelter hope?
For me – there is
no laughter now,
beyond the lull of
charted seas.
“This world is
bleak with Arctic weathers;
hidden demons
mould the clouds.
A haunted man is
left to guess
the changeless
writ of fates to come;
but all we love
must pass away,
and all we’ve made
is left undone.
I seek the place
where oceans pour
to darkness with
the force of grief;
I map bare corners
of this world
against the need
to welcome spring -
it flowers now,
with modesty;
but though I feel
the west wind blow,
far Eden’s shore
means more to me.
“The earth was
never known for pain
until the fruit of
good and ill
was taken by the
sire of Cain;
tomorrow’s child
must learn from age,
as dragons dwell
in smiling men,
so ogres sleep in
midnight’s songs;
I will uphold the
hero, for our sons.
“Blessed the man
who suffers hardship,
knows the tempest,
keeps his faith;
blessed the man
who strives for glory,
winning praise
from equal men;
blessed the man
who leaves the shore
and seeks a
judgement at God’s heart.”
So spoke a grey-haired traveller,
who drained his cup, and sighed,
and sat apart.
WASSAILING
A spirit in the roots has
heard the horn,
The gunshot, and he drains the
rough libation.
One man bows low - another
shakes the branches;
A bare white arm is reaching
down from darkness.
White fingers fold around the
gilded cup.
Who is that boy, - who hides
among the boughs,
Who wears the crown of
mistletoe, - that young one?
The lantern, raised so high,
reveals no face.
What now? Why does he pass
down empty sacks?
Why does he laugh to hear the
farmers praise him,
As though he holds the weather
in his hands?
At last, the old men stamp
about the roots.
They stagger under loads we
cannot see,
As if they feel the harvest on their backs.
Gary Bills was born at Wordsley, near Stourbridge. He took his first degree at Durham University, where he studied English, and he has subsequently worked as a journalist. He is currently the fiction editor for Poetry on the Lake, and he has recently gained his MA in Creative Writing at BCU, with a distinction.
He has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize for his post-modernist epic poem, Bredbeddle's Well, which was published in Lothlorien in 2022.
Gary's poetry has appeared in numerous publications, including The Guardian, Magma, HQ and Acumen, and he has had three full collections published, – “The Echo and the Breath” (Peterloo Poets, 2001); “The Ridiculous Nests of the Heart” (bluechrome, 2003); and “Laws for Honey” (erbacce 2020). In 2005, he edited “The Review of Contemporary Poetry”, for bluechrome.
His work has been translated in to German, Romanian and Italian. A US-based indie publisher, The Little French, published his first novel, “A Letter for Alice” in 2019, and a collection of stories, “Bizarre Fables”, in 2021. These were illustrated by his wife, Heather E. Geddes. His second novel, "Sleep not my Wanton", came out in January 2022.
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