Poem of the day

Heron

by Simon Armitage

You pull onto the soft verge

And the tyres slacken into the dirt.

 

I pass the field-glasses

From the glove compartment

And you fumble, finding a focus

Through the action of the wipers

 

And describe it to me: how it

Hangs in the shallows, shaking the rain

From its featherings. How it watches,

Then cautiously adopts

 

Its fishing position, then wades

Thoughtfully forward, then holds again.

You go on piecing out the picture

And I affect not to listen

 

Until you put the glasses down

And I realise you’ve stopped talking.

We sit there, breathing, steaming up

The windows and watching

 

As the heron feints

To a fleck on the line of the lake

Like a wood-chip flaw

On slate Ingres paper

 

And the hilltops are water-marked

If we look hard enough.

 

23 April

The 70-Poet Challenge

Photograph image of Dylan Thomas bust surrounded by library stamp dates, with pale yellow background
20 April

Peculiar

by Mary Kuper

Image Credit: 
keyoperator/Grosvenor@SCANNERPC
19 April

Passaway

by Penelope Shuttle

deep sorrow for his passaway

              sorry we lost he

 

after your passaway 

              I give you river, 

              cloud reflected in river

 

You give back river 

              you give back cloud

 

sorry we lost he

 

I give you whirling dervish of house, 

              half-mile of heron

 

You give them back, 

              you are passaway

 

I give you memory 

              of our weekdays and weekends 

                            and all the days in between

 

You give them back 

              with or without sorrow 

                            I can’t tell

 

sorry we lost he

 

I give you hodgepodge of spiders, 

              Love’s dagger-proof coat, 

                            myself when young

 

I give you river and cloud, 

              you return them, unused, 

                            don’t need them

 

              you are passaway