A FEW MORE POEMS
Porthgwarra by Tim Veater
Yesterday, I thought, “Tomorrow,
I'll do a trip, and venture to Porthgwarra.”
And so I did, and so I saw,
A newly appeared and terrifying thing:
In modern parlance, a 'Sink Hole'.
In fact a collapsed sea cave,
Unfenced and shear.
I stood entranced and petrified,
Requiring nerve to stand beside,
The unguarded edge and lear.
Where fathoms far below,
The rounded boulders,
Of an ocean floor appeared.
In dread imagination feared
It might collapse some more,
Even the very location where I stood.
Or what creatures plunged with it,
When all the ground had disappeared,
Or if by chance an unspecting walker,
Had slid into that ghastly abyss.
It was with some relief,
I walked away from it,
On narrow sandy path,
Past monoliths of granite,
Lichen-whiskered with salty time,
Topped by a cap of mustard yellow;
Buttoned on one side, white with Thrift,
The other, Bluebelled Oxford blue,
Led back to Porthgwarra Cove.
And there, next to the tumbling stream
Out to the limitless sea,
I sat and ate my quiche lorraine
And gazed in wonder
At the tireless, timeless waves.
Aware alone, I sat again,
After the many years had passed,
A vista dotted with yellow flags and gorse,
The spotted gold of lovers lost
And passions drained,
Into the blue and icy main.
The endangered Choughs,
Which protected, about here live,
In formal black, fly by aghast
And squawk their scornful laughter
At the curs-ed human far below,
Prayerfully partaking his repast,
Whilst rugged cliffs resist the ocean's roar,
Of Neptune's hammer blows.
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The long love that in my thought doth harbour And in mine heart doth keep his residence, Into my face presseth with bold pretence And therein campeth spreading his bannèr. She that me learns to love and suffèr And wills that my trust, and lust’s negligence Be reined by reason, shame, and reverence, With his hardiness takes displeasùre. Wherewithall unto the heart’s forest he fleèth, Leaving his enterprise with pain and cry, And there him hideth, and not appearèth. What may I do when my master fearèth? But in the field with him to live and die For good is the life, ending faithfully.
Thomas Wyatt, (1503 - 1542) a prolific poet, is accredited with introducing the fourteen line sonnet to England. The above is a take on Petrarch's (1304 - 1374) 'Amour che nel penser'.
WIKI: "As the book fell open, Petrarch's eyes were immediately drawn to the following words from St Augustine's Confessions: "And men go about to wonder at the heights of the mountains, and the mighty waves of the sea, and the wide sweep of rivers, and the circuit of the ocean, and the revolution of the stars, but themselves they consider not.[23]
"Petrarch's response was to turn from the outer world of nature to the inner world of "soul": "I closed the book, angry with myself that I should still be admiring earthly things who might long ago have learned from even the pagan philosophers that nothing is wonderful but the soul, which, when great itself, finds nothing great outside itself. Then, in truth, I was satisfied that I had seen enough of the mountain; I turned my inward eye upon myself, and from that time not a syllable fell from my lips until we reached the bottom again. ... [W]e look about us for what is to be found only within. ... How many times, think you, did I turn back that day, to glance at the summit of the mountain which seemed scarcely a cubit high compared with the range of human contemplation[23]"
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Lost
Love by Tim Veater
Larger
than life it got away,
Oh for the grace to let it go.
Where is
the joy that went astray?
Gone on the howling gale that blows!
Familiar the face that looks my way.
Who would have guessed
they knew me so?
Funny the funny games we play,
Making so sure
that no one knows.
Bleached
the colours. Faded the hues.
Where is the orchard that once we
grew?
Gone in the chilling swirling river,
Blown by the wind,
swept with a shiver -
Playing the part of the indifferent swinger
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Mountain peaks shrouded in icy-blue.
April 2026 by Tim Veater
So it is April yet again,
Yet again, yet again.
I like the sound of it,
Like a distant train,
Like a distant train,
Travelling the tracks,
Clicking the cracks,
Of an earthly time machine,
Thrusting its way, ever onward,
Into a tunnel of love,
Never to be seen again.
This little blue orb,
In its beautiful garb,
Is set like an opel in space
All blackness around
And ne're ever a sound
Until Artemis too,
Splashes down on its face
And the smell of the sea
And the sound of the waves
Salt splashing the ears
With an earthy refrain.
It's April again
Now freshened with rain
As the photons of light
Kiss the leaves,
For here it is yellow and green
And everyone's seen
What in April the sunlight can do,
To this small patch of garden I view.
Though none can explain
Whether particle or wave
Or absolutely nothing, tis true.
The light from a star
Falls right where we are
And somehow makes everything glow,
From the eye to the brain
I'll say it again
It's a mystery no one can know.
Exquisite, unique,
Of its beauty I speak
This April, this Spring,
Of it let us sing,
Ere we drown in a blood-thirsty stew.
My gggGrandfather Thomas Veater's (1787 - 1857) mother was a Rose and he married a Parfitt
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