
Friday, 8 June 2012
Monday, 4 June 2012
Of The Many Stags by Steve Rudd
All poems start with a lump in the throat
Said Robert Frost; well, the lump I’d speak, my lump,
Is a lump of rock, in Clyde
water, fourteen hazy miles clear
Of the blue coast of Ayrshire;
a granite knot
That binds up my best memories in a bundle.
A slice of my life, on screen now,
One-sixtieth of a second, Lamlash Bay,
me and the dog
Two thousand five, and Holy Isle
Seven years ago, now digitized
Sleeps blurred in heat behind me, the horizon.
Mountains with Gaelic names, high scree
Where no man treads, stones, chambered tombs,
Contours the long-forgotten lines of territory
Atlantic rain soft-blurs epitaphs
On lonely graves of nameless sailors;
Sandy
shores, Kildonan and Kilmory
Blackwaterfoot, bucket, spade,
Seals, otters, Basking Sharks,
And lighting driftwood fires on pebble beaches,
And pods of porpoises, Kilbrannan Sound,
All still exist in stasis, beyond my reach;
Somewhere between the sunset, and Kintyre
The ferry-boat is always halfway to Clanaoig;
The Calley Isles
is coming from Ardrossan
The sun is always setting on Goatfell, Glen Chalmadale,
Last day of holidays, as I stand on Brodick Promenade
Waiting the Calmac boat’s return, the lump in my throat
Is Arran, being my poem,
once again.
Saturday, 2 June 2012
The World's Longest Poem


See more on this project
We've now converted the 1215 lines of the existing poem and we will now be adding all of the contributions which have come flooding in during the last few weeks, as Gez Walsh travels the length and breadth of the UK and, indeed, beyond, performing and appearing in schools and libraries and at festivals. If you've recently sent us something, watch out for it appearing in the next couple of weeks or so!
WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT?
Famous Potty Poet, Gez Walsh, is hoping to add the title "Guinness World Record Holder” to his many accomplishments. He’s aiming to produce the world’s longest collaborative poem!
There have been many famous long poems in literary history, of course, from the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh to Anglo-Saxon sagas such as Beowulf, through Medieval poems such as The Canterbury Tales, via Paradise Lost and Wordsworth’s Prelude …
All of which are very tough acts to follow: Gez is unfazed by this, but he needs the help of all you unsung poets out there:
"What makes my idea different is that it will be a collaborative effort,” he says. "People still think of poetry as essentially a solitary activity, with the lonely poet sitting up in his attic, sighing about his lost love. Nothing could be further from the truth! -We're going back to the original roots of poetry, when people would gather round the campfire and swop epic tales of heroes, villains, monsters, myth and magic.
One other important difference between Gez's poem and its epic predecessors is that it will be created online and this is another factor, says Gez, which will promote co-operation and inclusivity. Gez believes the internet can be liberating. "The internet is the modern equivalent of gathering round the campfire to tell tales and stories. It's just that now, the camp fire is a global one, and everyone is welcome. As long as people stick to the basic structure and any rhythm or rhyme scheme that is going on - or invent their own," says Gez, "they can take the poem where they like, subject to the normal standards of taste and decency and some basic legal considerations - which, in Potty Poetry, are set pretty low!" What else would you expect from the poet laureate of flatulence?
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Torch Song by Steve Rudd
On the day of the royal wedding (29th April 2011) and on the day
before, the police arrested dozens of people pre-emptively. People who
had not committed any crimes were arrested, often handcuffed, and
detained in police cells. – News Report
I’d like to race in the ‘Lympics
But I’m guessing I must stay put
Because I’m in a wheelchair -
I have no athlete’s foot
I’d like to jump in the ‘Lympics
I’d wear my new pullover
If I thought there was the slightest chance
Of meeting “Fee-up-and-over”
I’d like to dive in the ‘Lympics
But it could be a pain
Cos’ I’d have to be para-plegic
And I don’t even own a ‘plane!
I’d like to swim in the ‘Lympics
Ambitions, I sure gottem:
But sadly, metal does not float,
And I’d end up on the bottom!
I’d like to compete in the ‘Lympics
Despite all the problems and bugs
And every day I’d strain, and train,
By taking a cocktail of drugs!
But I rather think that the ‘Lympics
Are a bit of a waste of space
Until and unless we disableds
Can rejoin the human race
Cause it seems to me at the moment
That patriotism is rife
But it don’t extend to the ill and the poor
Who are struggling with everyday life
It’s OK to cheer on our athletes
It’s OK to wave at the Queen
But it might get you arrested
To say that great wealth is obscene
‘Cause some in this land are speeding ahead
Without any handicap
While the rest of us are left plodding behind
And bearing their burdens through crap
I’ve had my fill of the ‘Lympics
Let alone the para-sequel
I don’t know why we should celebrate
When things are so unequal
So here’s an idea for the ‘Lympics,
For you would-be torchbearers to learn;
Use it to set fire to Parliament,
And then watch the buggers burn.
I’d like to race in the ‘Lympics
But I’m guessing I must stay put
Because I’m in a wheelchair -
I have no athlete’s foot
I’d like to jump in the ‘Lympics
I’d wear my new pullover
If I thought there was the slightest chance
Of meeting “Fee-up-and-over”
I’d like to dive in the ‘Lympics
But it could be a pain
Cos’ I’d have to be para-plegic
And I don’t even own a ‘plane!
I’d like to swim in the ‘Lympics
Ambitions, I sure gottem:
But sadly, metal does not float,
And I’d end up on the bottom!
I’d like to compete in the ‘Lympics
Despite all the problems and bugs
And every day I’d strain, and train,
By taking a cocktail of drugs!
But I rather think that the ‘Lympics
Are a bit of a waste of space
Until and unless we disableds
Can rejoin the human race
Cause it seems to me at the moment
That patriotism is rife
But it don’t extend to the ill and the poor
Who are struggling with everyday life
It’s OK to cheer on our athletes
It’s OK to wave at the Queen
But it might get you arrested
To say that great wealth is obscene
‘Cause some in this land are speeding ahead
Without any handicap
While the rest of us are left plodding behind
And bearing their burdens through crap
I’ve had my fill of the ‘Lympics
Let alone the para-sequel
I don’t know why we should celebrate
When things are so unequal
So here’s an idea for the ‘Lympics,
For you would-be torchbearers to learn;
Use it to set fire to Parliament,
And then watch the buggers burn.
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Patience by Steve Rudd
Those that tend fires require
A special form of patience
Watching through the window, winter-long
While the rain streaks; patience of a
saint
Then, after bare grey days, at last
Catkins on branches unfurl daily until
The stumbling bee finally arrives
Late and cold like the spring at last
And the badger comes at night, or dusk
Rooting up the garden, from dark woods
behind;
With patience to stay wakeful, and the
stamina
You may glimpse its fleeting stripes by
moonlight
Patience can make time pass quick or slow
Reconciling, days go by, like a pack of
cards
Being shuffled and cut, and shuffled
again
Jokers are always wild, spread out the
deck
Red queen on black king; as pastimes go
It’s right up there with watching drying
paint
Or having faith that things will ever
change
Carry your cards, clock in, clock out,
clock off
Have patience, they say; spring is coming
-
It will come; it always does, sit tight
And tend your fire, and cultivate your
garden
Long green spring evenings, now it’s
light
But I was always better at starting fires
Than tending them, never saw the point
Of patience as a virttue (or a vice)
It’s not as if there’s ever any option…
Just sit there, and be a little patient
Tending your fire, not getting rash,
taking your meds
In case your ever-coursing arteries
harden
One day, if you’re patient, things may
better!
One day, a lifetime’s end away from now.
Watch and learn, boy, watch and learn;
Life is what happens while you’re being
patient.
Sunday, 13 May 2012
Invisible Mending by Steve Rudd

One of those dull cold mornings, cursing,
I put my foot straight through a trouser turnup:
Now, my pants hang, sag, sadly over shoe,
Adding to my general dereliction -
A stitch in time was needed, ah yes
If only we knew, with perfect hindsight
The point where we should have stuck
The needle in, to intervene, to save
The need for later pins and needles
Pain jabbing – only a stitch, they say,
And you’ll soon run it off
A stitch in time saves nine; nine tailors makes a man,
Stitching surrounds us daily, like tapestry -
All of those needles, always waiting
Needles, sharp, fine, or hollow, hunting for a thread
But even caught in time, I do not think
There’s such a thing as invisible mending –
You rip what you sew; Euripides, Eumenides,
Your gentle “hem” is always ignored,
And life sharpens its needles, day by day
On worries worn as flat as rune-stones
Or pebbles in my shoe, the one that I stuck through
The web of cloth I tore by clumsiness
And so eventually, with the sense of an ending,
You’re forced to hunt the thimble, do your best
(In olden days, they’d sew you in a vest
each winter, underneath pincushion clouds)
Patches on patches, and hope your stitches hold,
Your needle swinging always to mag north
Follow it blindly on the rocks
And you may find they sew you into sailcloth,
The last stitch through your nose
I should watch where I put my feet
And tread more carefully: it’s always easier
To have a care, than try and mend a tear
Friday, 16 March 2012
Friends Reunited by Steve Rudd
Now that I’m pushing sixty, I spend time,
Much more time than I used to, looking back
Instead of forwards. Back, over my shoulder,
Down the hill of years, stand long-demolished pubs
Where we sank our first illicit pints, in streets, levelled
now,
Where we had rare, exotic snogs at bus-stops,
Or, more often, disappointed, caught the last train home.
Was that even me, those years ago?
I’m not looking for my lost youth,
I know exactly where he is, he’s prisoner
Inside flat planes of photographs,
Black and white, I know him all too well
Awkward and gawky, John Lennon glasses,
Flares and tennis shoes, back in the days
Before they got called `trainers’.
Places like this don’t help: my past’s online
As if I was already history’s exhibit. Why am I here?
Because my old school friend (now lives in Wales!)
Sent me a “link” to click on, and up pops
This photo, taken 1967; both the message
And the medium of transmission, wireless through air,
Would have seemed witchcraft to us, way back then.
Boothferry Playing Fields, yeah, there we are,
Boys and girls both, fixed in our best blue uniforms,
Like specimens in a museum diorama;
Staring out into a future that became unravelled,
Lots of different lives, shorter for some than others,
Blank pages, still to be written, tangled skeins
Ravelling and unravelling again, blood in new veins,
New names to be grafted onto vacant branches
Of the budding family tree.
Their eyes ask what I want of them, especially the girls,
With their prim white kneesocks; that’s easy answered!
I want the same thing now
I wanted then, but more so!
Though `now’ would be more difficult, for me, `now’ would
involve
Me ironing out my wrinkles, standing up (a miracle!)
And shrugging off the rucksack of the decades
That I carry, back-bending baggage,
– and for them, much
harder still,
Changing back their names, forsaking kids and husbands,
Or rising from the pages of the dead,
Pulling on tight jeans, frizzing their hair, getting stoned
again,
Wearing beads and headbands and
Coming through my screen, their virgin presence
Filling the room with the sudden scent of patchouli
- Filling my life with what might once have been.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)