Category Archives: Poetry

Your Voice Still Roars.

 

Thirty years without you,

It has gone in a blink of an eye,

yet still, you remain, in my thoughts,

larger than life, the story man,

Adanac and the green painted door,

The Story Man, a ready tale

of heroism that I have tried,

and failed,

to live up to.

March 1st 1988, ironic to die

on a patron saint’s day, we all do

though I guess, have to pass

through the gossamer thin web and veil

eventually, it is though whether we

Snow Drift Angel.

 

The snow drifts silently down,

feather touch, soft and beautiful

against the flash of the camera

which lights up the scene in Sefton Park.

An everyday photograph of a park bench

in winter, deserted, surrounded by claustrophobic emptiness,

by time standing still and in the distance

a bell calls the man home, a clock

striking midnight, magic happens

in dark lonely places, as the man

pulls his coat tight around his snow covered shoulders,

and it wouldn’t be till the morning,

when the man returned to the scene

The House That Lost Weight.

Bin bags galore, lined up drunkenly spewing

the whiff of loaded down hoarding,

a symptom of the black I have been touching,

holding close, I want

to let go.

No council name or number

blazed across the thin plastic coating,

an advertising sign

coated in the decay of years

that the item inside has been lost

but holding ground, a black hole swallow

and burp now tied together with string,

a promise in the knot that this is the last time

I hold such antique thoughts and treasures

Graveyard Love.

 

Standing end on end in graveyards,

The near dead adorn their resting place

with words, with their sentence

of death inscribed

and dated, stamped, remembering the last time

they were thought of

fondly, with fingers quivering

with anticipation, their spines

still erect, still perfect,

but like anything that breathes life,

soon will fade, soon will lose their meaning,

their passion

as younger, more tempting words

are echoed and brushed against

closed dreaming eyes and the smell

of the new and intoxicating

…And I Set Fire To The Grass.

…and I set the grass on fire

out in the meadow

in the hope of raising smoke signals

so you might see my concerns,

you left me without defences, no timber

to build shelter, no army to stand alongside,

only hope that once the short fuse

was lit, that the grass grew black

and blazed for a second or two

before burning out

you might find the signal

as it melted away

into the clouds above.

 

Ian D. Hall 2018

A Biography.

I read

your biography, hand stamped

and correction liquid filled

till the paper stuck like glue

and the pictures,

all glory, had your head

on the shoulders of giants.

I heard your authorised memoir

through my ears and the hairs

wilted under the pressure, singed

by facts and figures

quoted by this somewhere man

whose ego arrives an hour

before his life;

I took your words and I let them blow away

into the sunset, a history, not secret,

no tale too tall which you could

Thank You For It All.

 

I wouldn’t have got far,

nowhere at all really,

if you had not come into my life

and shown me a new road in which

to travel, a crossing in which to pause

at and wait for the signal to move back,

and also to understand sometimes

that you have to step back

in which to gain momentum.

I would not have got anywhere

if you had not shown me how to break

using my feet and worn down sole,

I would have still been

Midweek Birthdays Are Not Cool.

 

Birthdays rarely fall

when they should,

a day in which to celebrate

and make good

of the hopeful

cheer that might come your way

would be better served in warmer climes,

not in the frozen pastures of February,

neither ought it tumble

onto the stony, unforgiving ground

of the weekday, wantaway Blues,

where grown adults of the current age

shake their heads and say,

not on a school night, despite

not having children to care for.

I will take my birthday when it comes,

Nonsense.

I have thrown out so many bags

for refuse of late, that countless

ideas of nonsense have become

obsolete, not worthy of being

in the same house anymore;

I must find a way to make room

for the hopeful flights of fancy

that are being conceived,

embryonic, shifting shapes

of butterflies, pinned down,

to grow into

the nonsense they desire to be.

 

Ian D. Hall 2018

Valentine’s Table.

 

Valentine’s Day is cruel,

unforgiving as expectations are raised

and the hope of a declaration of love

so special is hoisted high

in the hopes that your relationship

is seen to be perfect;

she told me to be ready by seven,

the table was booked for eight

and for a change

she was treating me to a night out

in low lights, soft music

and a night which was not

to be considered make

or break.

I hated the idea of such fuss,