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Robert Eshelby
Let the Poetry Begin!
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What nicer way to start a poetry blog which is mostly about love, than with a poem about the traditional sign of affection... A Kiss A thousand lips a thousand meet, In kisses sad and kisses sweet, With lips that pout and lips that greet, And lips that charm and also cheat. But lips that meet in trust and love, Are kisses soft as cooing dove, That sear in soul-consuming heat And fuse the lips in kiss complete. So, let us lip with lip entice And taste on Earth such Paradise! The world is too much with us - we are out of tune. Wordsworth realised that most of us spend so much time earning our living, being successful and making money that we fail to notice the important things in life. Before we know it, we are middle-aged and then, so quickly, old. We don't spend time measuring the seasons and marvelling in Nature's wonder. Worse, we are too pre-occupied to notice true love when it comes to us and, turning round, find that it has passed us by. There is not a moment to be lost! Look for your love and when you find it, hold it close! Time and tide will not wait. A Wedding Invitation I ask a moment of your time, To stop your work, your hue and cry, And measure with your busy eye, The suckle’s honey-helix climb. Or weigh the ploughed field’s breathless hush, As, weaving through astonished sky, The lark bursts forth from heavenly high, To still the earth’s relentless rush. And then, one summer’s afternoon, Before it sinks, to watch the sun, And haste away, as I have done, To catch your love before she’s gone. Oh, the pain of loving and not being noticed! The misery of seeing the object of your love moving quickly away with not a care. You'd do anything just to be noticed! Just a glance ? A smile.......? Swansdown Oh, loveliest one, Oh, lady swan, Make me the lake You swim upon, The newt you tweak With hungry beak, The egg you heat Beneath your seat, The thoughts you take When you have gone. Make me your song Oh, muted tongue! And you shall sing The whole day long. The feather, pressed To warm your breast, The day, the night That bathe your flight, The chest to rest Your sweetness on. It is May 2020 and the misery of Covid 19 is rising. Ruth and I are in our lovely farmhouse in France, locked down in The Vendee. Out of the blue comes an e-mail from Hector and Iris, our grand-children, with a photo. They have found a blackbird's nest in the garden shed. What joy! And, there is the photo to prove it. Something truly wonderful at a time of misery for so many! Twenty-Twenty Blackbirds Five eggs nestle, sound asleep in thistledown, covert in a corner. blue and gold, they lie. still-life in a garden where cuckoos cry. slip away on tip-toe, and, when the world next calls its shout and thunder,r remember the calm, the eggs of lapis blue - and wonder. Robert Eshelby 7th May, 2020 For my grandchildren, Emily, Jack, Iris and Hector There is a phenomenon, which we can all recognise as displacement behaviour. Picture a dog in front of a blazing fire, turning round and round in his own length to find exactly the right spot before he flings himself down with a sigh to cope with all the complexity of sleeping peacefully until dinner time. He could have just come in and got on with it! This is the nearest I can get to understanding the speech displacement of some of our younger (and not so young) people. Instead of informing us in a straightforward way that a spade is a spade, we hear that a spade is, 'like, a spade,' or it is a, 'sort of, spade', or even that a spade is 'sort of, like a spade' ! As the joke goes, ' When is a spade not a spade? ' Answer? 'When it 's kind of like, a sort of bloody shovel !' This is, usually, an ingrained habit, not unlike a soldier's scattering of expletives in daily conversation. I've noticed that if someone is inclined to 'likes' and 'sort ofs', these often disappear when the speaker is truly enthused. Like Love So! What is love? It’s, sort of, like an ever-filling well Inside, that, sort of, overflows, And, like, floods the fields With effervescent water. It’s like, caring for yourself, sort of, But having lots left over For, like, every flower and leaf And every furry little soul That lives beneath the hedge And around the garden. It’s, sort of, feeling kind To those you meet, and not Just kith and kin. Love is like dipping Every morning in an icy spring, To turn and face the world full-on, Like a tiger, unafraid. It’s like a mother’s soft fingers Running through the tendrils Of her darling’s hair. It’s not all meek and milksop, Full of misery and woe. It’s not like in the movies Or the television show, But, sometimes, like a wild bull Bucking or a stallion kicking, Is love. It’s like a mighty, all-consuming flame, That changes everything inside, So you can touch the farthest reaches Of the world. And so it sears, As prisms magnify before the sun, Intense, until the focus softly drops And lays you in the sweetest pool. Love is not like anything we know. It is kind, it is soft. It tests, it pains. It cares and is soothing, And is breath-taking. It is all these things, Rejoicing every day. Which is not like love, But it certainly is, like, Love. For Robbie Robert Eshelby 1st Feb, 2021 © Robert Eshelby 2021
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My LifeI was born in England soon after the war. I moved , with my family to Australia in 1966, where I was a soldier (briefly), a public servant, an opera singer, and an English teacher. Archives
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