THE OLD STATION WALL

Longing to go away and hating to walk past the
railway station instead of going in and booking a seat
on a train – any train to almost anywhere – I thought of
the time I was on the train in this poem. It was a sunny morning and
great fingers of sunshine swept the old dark shadows of
the station away. Stations and trains and total devotion.

THE OLD STATION WALL

That great black wall
Towering over the train
Standing at the station,

Grows little green ferns
In the cracks between bricks,

Sends tiny yellow flowers
Bursting out of the old tar and dust,
So full of life and hope,

Their tiny petals tickle
The darkness with sunshine.

©2021 Gwen Grant

DANGEROUS HARBOUR

harbour

We go to the north of Scotland for our holidays and particularly do we like the
sea coast .  On one visit, we were lucky enough to be there when a storm blew up.
It was  so awe inspiring, the power of the sea and the elements.  I didn’t feel quite so
lucky when we came out of shelter and made a run for it to quieter places.  You think
of the same power pushing a flower through rock hard earth but we can’t see that.
As I’m writing this, the moon is shining from a dark blue sky lighting up the world.

  DANGEROUS HARBOUR

As we stand here,
On the edge of the world,
The wet streets peeling away
From the tiny harbour,
The sea, in a fit of spite,
Swirls and tumbles
Onto the stony shingle,
Rattling the shells
From one bony ridge to another,
Hissing its peevish laughter
At the moonbeams dancing uneasily
Down this stretch of wild water.

Until, in a fury of authority,
The moon calls all to order.
Combing the white frilled water
Into its thin silver fingers,
Braiding light into the aching darkness,
Its own face darkening as it considers
The water’s bold and fierce behaviour.

Now look what’s happened!
The moon has turned her back
On the tiny, frozen harbour,
Battered by the shell hung water,
Smashing foam flowers
Onto the old stone causeway,
Onto our icy, hasty shoulders,
As we run helter-skelter for safety
To a deep and far away doorway.

Now the sly and sliding waters
Try to tumble us off our frozen feet,
Try and pull us into the rolling sea
To be another bony shell in the making.

                                   © 2018 Gwen Grant

PAPER BIRD

I seem always to have lived where there were a lot of birds around.  As a child, one
of the favourite occupations was making paper birds, although I wasn’t very good at that,
wasn’t good at all, actually, and so I drew my birds, then cut them out and stuck them
onto card.  We have a lot of birds in the garden who give us great pleasure.

PAPER BIRD

Bird,
Dancing on the air,
Paper wings
Stretched wide to catch
The morning sun.

The scent of flowers,
Tiny filaments
Caught in precise folds,
In sharp lines,
In perfection,
Touching the heart.

Paper bird,
Possessing the sky,
Your silent beauty
Grace in action.

Creator maker praying
Rough wind and storm
May never bring you down.

©2024 Gwen Grant

JUNE MORNING

I remember many Junes, some more than others. The June when I was
300 miles away from home in a place I barely recognised as being on the same
planet as home until I found the woods and fields. Then I felt at home . Then I
felt this was my world and it still works like that.

JUNE MORNING

This is no ordinary morning,
This is a June morning.

Early fog burnt off by the sun,
The soft murmuring of birds
Sweeping in, around and among
The joyful daisies,
Curling into the cloud
Of remembered bluebells
Growing under the cherry tree,
Still sending their eternal blueness
Into the world.

And the cat, watching everything
With sharp gold eyes,
Folds up and falls asleep,
Stretched out on the grass.
Conquered by the white heat of love.

While the new sheep in the paddock,
With their big ears and long faces
Stand silent in the stillness,
Suddenly exploding into movement.

And all is caught up in the spell
Of a summer morning.
All caught up in the spell
Of a rapturous June.

©2024 Gwen Grant.