Thursday 8 October 2015

Books


 BOOKS

 

It lies there on the table just waiting to be read,

Beneath its hard back covers bound with linen thread,

The authors weaves their magic with special tales to tell

And you the reader cannot wait to fall beneath their spell

Some books they draw you right away into their special world

Whilst others tantalise and twist their secrets to unfurl,

It does not matter where you are in wood or busy train,

The world inside their pages is your mystical domain,

You settle down to read a book, your whole demeanour changes

The outside world it disappears, whilst you delve into its pages,

You are lost within its special world its characters are real,

Displaying all emotions that we human people feel,

The authors can transport us to far and distant lands,

Or have us wander aimlessly beside a coastal strand,

I could not live without my books they are to me a treasre

They fill my life with happiness and brighten up my leisure

 
Ted Morgan

national poetry day poem


National Poetry Day 2015

 

Today is National Poetry Day

So I’m saying it in rhyme

The only problem seems to be

That I do it all the time

When I went to the chip shop

For sausage chips and peas

She asked me ‘salt and vinegar?’

And I answered her ‘oh yes please’

And when my friend came visiting

And I made her favourite brew

I knew she liked it nice and sweet

So I said ‘three lumps or two?’

Last night when I was weary and I retired to my bed

I remembered to say ‘thank you Lord for my daily bread’

And when I woke this morning racked and stiff with pain

I muttered to my maker ‘Oh Lord, please not again’

Ann Redburn.

Wednesday 10 June 2015

The Neighbour

The Neighbour
 
I had a new neighbour – I thought it was great
He’s weeded the garden and painted the gate
Renewed all the woodwork – pointed the wall
Planted up baskets – and that is not all
He’s reflagged the back yard and strimmed back the weeds
(He did my side also for he saw my great need)
As I look from my window it’s breaking my heart
For my side is scruffy and his is so smart
So I’ve bought plants for my planters – but I know I won’t win
For he’s an OCD handyman – a bloody great sin!!!!!!
 
Ann Redburn


Thursday 14 May 2015

On th Buses

 
 
On The Buses
 
I remember years ago,
I used to work on the busses,
And I was the conductor,
Conductors were the bosses.
letting passengers on and off,
regardless of their class.
 
The 5 a.m. run was one of my favourites,
Full of miners en route to the pit,
All smoking pipes roll ups,
and something in between,
I never found out what they were,
but I think you know what I men.
 
My pet hate was the school run,
the kids were a nightmare,
And they couldn't do their sums,
They used to leave me messages,
on the backs of the seats,
spelt all wrong.
 
The evening shifts were funny
all the passengers like Jekyll and Hyde,
I took them out all sober
and they came back all pie eyed.
 
I should have been the driver,
he always looked so relaxed,
Especially when we went round a bend,
that's when my heavy ticket machine,
hit me in the middle of my back.
 
It was all a big mistake though,
I forgot one important fact,
Travel sick was I
so at the end of every shift
My guts for hours felt like
I had been on a roller coaster ride.
 
John Crook
 
 
 
 


Friday 10 April 2015

peace

 
 
PEACE
THERE IS NOT MUCH PEACE ON THIS ESTATE,
ON DAYS I WISH THERE WERE,
SUN IS OUT WITH A DYING BREEZE,
SO THE WEATHER IS SO FAIR,...
BABIES CRY, DOGS BARKING AND AIRCRAFT CIRCLE ROUND,
CAR ALARMS AND ICECREAM CHIMES AND SOME JETWASH SOUND,
I LISTEN LONG AND HARD,
AS COMOTION STRAINS MY SOUL,
THEN SLOWLY AND ONE BY ONE,
THEY ALL JUST SEEMED TO GO,
NO BABIES CRY, DOGS ASLEEP AND AIRCRAFT BACK AT BASE,
YES, AND THAT IS WHEN IT PUT,
A SMILE BACK ON MY FACE,
PEACE AND TRANQUILTIY CAN BE DIFFICULT TO FIND,
I NOW SHARE IT WITH THE BIRDS AND BEES,
AND A LOVELY GLASS OF WINE.
BY
JOHNNY CROOK
2015


Monday 16 March 2015

Mothering Sunday

                                                             


   Mothering Sunday.
Its Mothering Sunday but no Mum is near,
To straighten tie or brush our hair,
For years ago she was called to rest,
A special Mum who I thought the best,
Its days like this that we recall
Those special traits which helped us all,
The patience, calm and loving smile,
The look that would at once beguile,
If we were anguished and afraid,
She calmed our fears and made us brave,
Oh how I wish that she could see,
That frightened child that used to be,
But by words and guidance we now display
The influences we espouse today,
Our thanks to all the mums out there,
Who raised us all with kindness and care,
And let us hope that we do the same,
For our children who bear our name.
 
© Ted Morgan

Tuesday 17 February 2015

 
 
 
The Haggis Hunt
There’s a mysterious clan in the highlands,       
 Mc haggis their tartan of choice,
For they have hunted the wild mountain Haggis,
Since they were all wee little boys,
They have honed their skills with the claymore,
Their sporrans are big wide and brown,
With lots of the silver dangly bits
Made by silversmiths of great renown,
The haggis is small black and rotund
With legs at the front and the back,
And it scurries about in the heather,
Wherever bad weathers’ on track,
It likes best the snows of the winter
When winds at a gale fore do blow,
And hiding midst boulder and heather
Makes spotting them hard, don’t you know?
The big hunts take place in the New Year,
When the Haggis hunter’s guilds are in town,
Each hunter awash with the whisky
From first footing and the scotches they’ve downed,
Their eyesight at first is quite hazy,
And people in pairs they do see,
And spotting the wild mountain haggis,
Is a challenge on mountain and scree,
The wind is a problem in’t Gorbles,
 So a hot water bottle under kilts all did put,
To keep them all sung and so warm like
So avoiding a frost bitten Butt!
They slowly crept up on the haggis
And cornered the brute near a wall,
But just as the posse were pouncing,
The haggis rolled into a ball,
Away down the hillside it trundled,
Followed by the Mc haggis clan
But the bottles under kilts made them stumble,
And entwined with their legs as they ran
The hunters were soon in a big heap
And the haggis rolled far out of sight
So another year’s hunt was a failure
Caused by drinking whisky far into the night.
 
© Ted Morgan


The Cruellest of all Diseases

The Cruellest of all Diseases
I cannot ask you to help me remember
I cannot ask you to understand
There are times when I do not know you
Even when you hold my hand
I am locked in my little bubble
And though at times there is some memory
I will never be the one you love so
For now you are you – and I am me
Ann Redburn