Half an Hour in Hawes
Thirty-five minutes to be precise,
the Wensleydale Flyer drops me there
at twenty-past three, picks me up
across the road at five-to four.
It leaves me time to buy an ice-cream
from the Old Sweet Shop,
take a photo from the bridge
over Gayle Beck, the scene's the same
as nine years ago except for less water.
I walk back up the hill to where
the road to the Lakes begins -
see the sign for Sedbergh, sixteen miles.
I resist cakes from J W Cocketts,
am not even tempted by the cheese,
don't regret the shortness of my stay
on this sunny afternoon
of the second day in June.
It was worth it just for the views
from the minibus window -
Bainbridge, Askrigg, Carperby,
not to mention Castle Bolton;
a shame to miss out Aysgarth Falls,
but you can't have everything.
Vasey's
The price label's still stuck to the back
of Little Pig Robinson that I bought with
my auntie, a souvenir of my stay.
I open a blue plastic box in the kitchen
in search of the family tree, remember
getting it copied at the same counter
where I paid for the book years before,
a photocopy of a photocopy,
my grandmother said, worried
it wouldn't be legible.
Nearly three decades later it still is,
along with the letters she wrote me
using her Papermate rollerball
or a Pilot V5, which I find in the box,
and the Queen's Velvet logo
on the insides of envelopes
she'd have taken off shelves
long since knocked down to make way
for tables, in yet another Indian restaurant
in Bedale. In a drawer of her sideboard
does Grandma still have one of those
little black notepads that open
from the bottom, with a band
wrapped round it to keep it closed?
Will it contain old shopping lists,
or ideas for the novel
she never finished writing?
Growing Fruit
Most things look smaller
when you get older -
the hill not as steep,
the stairs fewer.
Chocolates were bigger
and so was the tin
which wasn’t made of plastic.
But marzipan fruits
now seem huge, not like
the tiny oranges and lemons
Grandma used to decorate
her Christmas cake.
I don’t remember there being
strawberries, pears or apricots.
I may be wrong about that
but not about their size,
for my auntie told me
without my having to ask,
when I said I’d been
to Lewis & Coopers
on the bus as they once did,
to buy the things for the same
recipe they always used -
candied peel, pineapple, ginger,
coloured cherries and angelica.
Peter J Donnelly lives in York where he works as a hospital secretary. He has a MA in Creative Writing and a BA in English Literature from University of Wales Lampeter. He has been published in various magazines and anthologies including One Hand Clapping, High Window, Black Nore Review, Ink Sweat and Tears, Obsessed with Pipework, Atrium and Dust. He won second prize in the Ripon Poetry Festival competition in 2021 and was a joint runner up in the Buzzwords open poetry competition in 2020. His first full length poetry book, Solving the Puzzle, was published in 2023 by Alien Buddha Press, as was his chapbook The Second of August.
No comments:
Post a Comment