HERON FLYING HOME

There has been a little flurry of herons going down to the river lately. 
If we are lucky, they seem to take a short cut  across
the sky, curving across the emptiness as if it’s a road already
marked out, then dropping down through the trees into the river.
They’re all magicians these lovely creatures that illuminate our
lives for when they appear, heron, rabbit, pheasant, fox,  whatever
presence they inhabit,  immediately they capture our full attention
and send us on our way full of joy and hope and love .

HERON FLYING HOME

There they all are, one after the other,
Herons going home.
Black shapes against a fading sky,
Beautiful and prehistoric,
None of them looking
At the shadowed trees below them.

Until one crashes the dark branches
To land in moon touched mud
At the side of the silent river.
Looking a bit like a witch

On a wicked broomstick,
Scratchy twigs sweeping
All the little creatures
Out of its imperious way.

Now the trees in the heronry
Are heavy with sleeping birds,
Each quietly contained,
All wrapped up in themselves.

The first stars pricking the sky,
The long dark fish in the water
Flashing a sudden brief silver,
Sharp eyes promising
To eat them in the morning.

Whilst, we, made of earth and sky,
Fold into the stars. 
Fold into the trees.

And, at the last,
Fold into the heron.

                                   © 2020 Gwen Grant

RESURRECTION

Good to be back at my desk after a fragmented time of worn out viruses – I was
certainly worn out, anyway. Today, I’m feeling a lot better and looking forward
to quieter days and summer.
Stay well!

RESURRECTION

We all have our own Gethsemane
When times are against us,
When, faultless and perfect,
Darkness no longer has an airy lightness
But falls upon us
With the full weight of sorrow.

From Gethsemane there comes always
That long walk to the crucifixion of hope,
That slow procession into loneliness,
That sombre step into a darkness where love
Becomes nothing but an old and lovely dream.

Yet that dark garden flames
With the resurrection of a living hope,
Throwing light into the darkness,
Bringing peace to the desolate,
Making all love new,
Its eternal promise forever redeeming,
That where love is,
Time no longer has any meaning.

© 2015 Gwen Grant

  MIDNIGHT WALK

Night walks are my favourite walks, not as often now as they used
to be and not as adventurous, either. I’m almost at the point of down
the road and back , which isn’t as bad as it may seem as we live in a
quieter part of the village with hedgerows and fields and patches of the
woodland I used to play in when I was a child.    This is a picture of a
bit
of a night wood waiting for morning.

MIDNIGHT WALK

      Walking through the dark trees,
      My steps sending little puffs of dust
      Over the small curling ferns crouching.
     The faint shine of a white petal
     Breaks through the intense darkness,
     Until a sudden throw of moonlight
     Brings the pale anemones,
     The golden celandine,
     Into perfect life on the woodland floor.

     I hear the soft shuffling of birds in their nests,
     Heads tucked under their wings,
     Deeply sleeping.
     Then the tiny bubbling of water running
     Down the little, half-hidden stream,
     Throwing the odd diamond drop
     Onto the yellow primrose.

     Here, small brown creatures
     Slip in and out of the freezing water,
     Icy, from the still snow laden hills so faraway
     This wood never thinks of them.
     Nor do we, until, we, too, are frozen.

     Out of the trees, onto the edge of the fields
     That stretch into the darkness,
     The small growings rustling an excited invitation
     To walk the night
     Over ploughed earth and stony frost sparkling
     To the far wood, which magic is held to own.
     But I turn back, not ready to meet a veiled magician
     Of spite, dead things and stagnant water.
     And the trees swallow me
     As a shadow is swallowed by darkness.

     Now the wood shakes itself,
     The trees whispering of this returned presence
    Walking their quiet and mossy paths.
     And I turn for home,
     To the lovely fragrance of wild roses
     In the hedgerows.

                                    ©2018 Gwen Grant

BEING DEAF

BEING DEAF

To be deaf
Means more than not to hear,
It means being locked out,
Shut up,
Confined
In a room designed for one
And no bigger.

To be deaf
Means watching lips,
Being an expert on mouths
That shout,
Or slur,
So that it is impossible to hear
What anyone is saying.

To be deaf
Means walking in silence,
Hearing music
In speechless eyes.
Or listening
To silent operas
Playing out on people’s faces.

©2025 Gwen Grant

 

         YELLOW LEAVES

        

Coming back from the Library, arms full of bo0ks, I saw a single
yellow leaf in front of my feet. It was so beautiful on a day of
wind and rain and freezing cold.
.

YELLOW LEAVES

Before morning,
All the yellow leaves
Had tumbled
To the ground.

All those crumpled lives
Straightened out.
The long beauty
Plain for all to see.

There’s something about
Dark hours,

Unexpected sunshine,
The stoicism of love

That fills us
With thankfulness
And hope for the future.

Like children painting
Rainbows
On empty houses.

     ©2025 Gwen Grant