A new Christmas poem by Carol Ann Duffy:

A new Christmas poem by Carol Ann Duffy:

Rain on the glass
Think I will pass
On all this rush
“What’s so funny?” I asked.
“Peace?
Love?
Understanding?”
“You’re a fanny,” she said
“don’t be so demanding.”
It’s still early
the lids are heavy
the locks are loose
not content
struggling to contain
the contents
standing aloof
left to choose
what stays
what goes
this harsh cold evening
Pray
Tell me how
in the here and now
what actions, words or deeds
sow the seeds
of love or hate or greed
in the hearts of others
are they not my brothers?
Tell me
Pray
I thought that I’d try to update the ‘About’ page of the blog the other day. Nothing fancy of course, just a few words to reflect the shifting focus. Or rather, the fact that I’d finally acknowledged that ‘the voice’ that I had been impatiently waiting for these past few years had been there all along.
No matter, I quickly typed something that I thought was to the point and, well, appropriate. In all likelihood it was crap. I honestly can’t remember, you see I read it and was struck by the fact that I was uncomfortable with one line. I played it around and around my head and it didn’t sit well with me. The real stumbling block was one word. Never have I spent so much time on one seemingly insignificant word. Just a word and the word was ‘just’.
“Poetry is just a peg to hang stuff on.”
What on earth did I mean by that? Isn’t it a bit dismissive? The problem is that I in no way consider myself a poet – good, bad or indifferent. I’ve been using the tag as somewhere to hang stuff; ideas, words, feelings, sounds. That doesn’t necessarily make it poetry, that’s for others to decide. It’s the librarian in me, I need to order these things, put them on a shelf.
What would others who knew, lived and breathed and seemingly understood poetry think of such a statement? I didn’t want to appear to belittle an art form, that was not my meaning. How many times is that word word used to dismiss individuals, groups, ideas, movements? It seemed like very dangerous ground.
Could I just drop the ‘just’? Well, I could but that would make it a rather bold, definitive statement and I’m no expert. I certainly wasn’t comfortable with saying “my poetry” because again I would be making a pronouncement on what I am and do. It’s not that clear cut.
This line of thought inevitably became circular. Around and around it went and the only way for it to stop was to cut it, all of it. Gone. It was the only just solution.
Making good progress
as I regress up the road towards a childhood
of frozen toes
The grounds are empty but for the white blanket
embracing the slope and the winding path
No longer an uphill struggle on mornings like this
to remember the fun to be had
from frozen toes

If only I could write like Glenn Patterson
nothing else would matter then
need not rejoice in the ghost of James
coursing through my veins
as Samuel rests and downs his pen
the sheets lie empty, then
I curse his name and cry
“feck it!”
It was conceived in a moment.
For one short, utterly glorious, bliss-filled interlude his head was filled with the most emphatic and thoroughly resounding air of superiority.
“Wow!” they would respond.
“I never knew!”
“You’re such a dark horse!”
“Really?”
And after the acceptance and accolades and adorning acolytes he would flatly retort, “No. I was just seeing if you were paying attention.”