Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Moments by Steve Rudd
Sometimes there are moments,
Like this one in the car park
An afternoon of eternity
Seems fixed in the moving of a cloud
Over the rooflines of town;
Or in that plane that droned across the sky
The morning of Aunt Sadie’s funeral.
Why should they etch themselves
Acid-deep onto the retina of memory
When all those other days
Days we’d looked forward to,
Anticipated, long and eager,
Passed flat, anticlimactic, unremembered,
And finally unrecorded?
Is it because, I wonder,
What some might call God
(but only when pissed, or sad, or both)
Bids us to remember in this way only
Things it deems important;
Sunsets, or the movement of waves
Across the bay; these transitory clouds,
The sway of the branches all around;
Moments in eternal stasis
Leaves, alternate green and gold
In lux aeternam
Even though the trees themselves
Will die in time to compost?
A holy juxtaposition
Sears like a branding,
A momentary hiss of painful joy, then
Leaves white clouds, towering in summer sky:
I will remember this, although I don’t know why.
Saturday, 7 July 2012
New Poetry Title from The King's England Press
We are pleased to announce the publication of the latest
collection of poems by Steve Rudd
ALBION is available from The King's England Press directly at www.kingsengland.com at £7.95 (print edition, 9 in x 6 in, pbk., 59pp,
ISBN 978 1 872438 65 8)
Or, if you prefer, there is an e-pub edition available from Lulu Inc at £3.99
Steve Rudd was born in Hull, East Yorkshire, in 1955, completely naked, unable to walk, talk, or fend for himself. His chief poetic claim to fame is that he once served Philip Larkin in a bookshop. Unfortunately for both parties at the time, he mistook the great man for Eric Morecambe.
He lives in West Yorkshire with a wife, a cat, and a variable number of dogs, but not necessarily in that order. His hobbies include annoying people, lying under the table with an empty can of Special Brew (which is, in itself, a form of prayer) thinking about Abraham Lincoln’s hat, and having staring contests with the linoleum.
In common with many other misguided adolescents, he began writing poetry while still at school. Fortunately for mankind, all of this early work has been lost.
Albion is his third poetry collection, and, like the other two, will probably appeal most strongly to people who have a table with one leg 0.33cm shorter than the other three.
In 2010 he was seriously ill and spent six months in hospital. Almost dying has had such a positive effect on his literary career that he is thinking of doing it more often in future.
collection of poems by Steve Rudd
ALBION is available from The King's England Press directly at www.kingsengland.com at £7.95 (print edition, 9 in x 6 in, pbk., 59pp,
ISBN 978 1 872438 65 8)
Or, if you prefer, there is an e-pub edition available from Lulu Inc at £3.99
Steve Rudd was born in Hull, East Yorkshire, in 1955, completely naked, unable to walk, talk, or fend for himself. His chief poetic claim to fame is that he once served Philip Larkin in a bookshop. Unfortunately for both parties at the time, he mistook the great man for Eric Morecambe.
He lives in West Yorkshire with a wife, a cat, and a variable number of dogs, but not necessarily in that order. His hobbies include annoying people, lying under the table with an empty can of Special Brew (which is, in itself, a form of prayer) thinking about Abraham Lincoln’s hat, and having staring contests with the linoleum.
In common with many other misguided adolescents, he began writing poetry while still at school. Fortunately for mankind, all of this early work has been lost.
Albion is his third poetry collection, and, like the other two, will probably appeal most strongly to people who have a table with one leg 0.33cm shorter than the other three.
In 2010 he was seriously ill and spent six months in hospital. Almost dying has had such a positive effect on his literary career that he is thinking of doing it more often in future.

Monday, 25 June 2012
Mirth’s Prime Ministers by Deborah Tyler-Bennett
Defunct barrel-organ’s crinkle-crankle,
thought forgotten, risen,
derelict theatre’s doves. Re-peopling
the past, until sensed orange-peel,
motley stalls, phosphor, as management’s
meagre boys go touting custom.
An old book’s picture conjures
and you’re seated in Row B with others
waiting a worn-out clown’s benediction –
Grimaldi’s final song.
Leant from his chair, hands raised,
paint’s walnut-wrinkly masquerade,
smile wide as Chaplin’s shoe.
Unspoken chorus: ‘Never Joey’s like again’
scarlet-spangle-spangle, blurring tinsel,
hands pressed to lips when all’s concluding.
Like Mum’s visit to George Robey’s last hurrah,
brought forward on a chair for curtain-calls,
twinkling as the orchestra came forward
afraid to miss him.
Hands’ blessing over in thrown dazzle-dust -
from an Empire’s picked-clean crab shell, flighty doves.
George Cruickshank illustrated the great clown Joseph Grimaldi’s ‘Last Song’ in 1839, George Robey, ‘The Prime Minister of Mirth,’ died in 1954 after several farewell tours.
thought forgotten, risen,
derelict theatre’s doves. Re-peopling
the past, until sensed orange-peel,
motley stalls, phosphor, as management’s
meagre boys go touting custom.
An old book’s picture conjures
and you’re seated in Row B with others
waiting a worn-out clown’s benediction –
Grimaldi’s final song.
Leant from his chair, hands raised,
paint’s walnut-wrinkly masquerade,
smile wide as Chaplin’s shoe.
Unspoken chorus: ‘Never Joey’s like again’
scarlet-spangle-spangle, blurring tinsel,
hands pressed to lips when all’s concluding.
Like Mum’s visit to George Robey’s last hurrah,
brought forward on a chair for curtain-calls,
twinkling as the orchestra came forward
afraid to miss him.
Hands’ blessing over in thrown dazzle-dust -
from an Empire’s picked-clean crab shell, flighty doves.
George Cruickshank illustrated the great clown Joseph Grimaldi’s ‘Last Song’ in 1839, George Robey, ‘The Prime Minister of Mirth,’ died in 1954 after several farewell tours.
Wednesday, 13 June 2012
Free short story by Steve Rudd
Free short story for "liking" my writer's page!
Yes - it's shameless self promotion time again!
Because I need to drive up the number of "likes"
on my Steve Rudd author page,
I'm now offering a limited edition of a one-off free
pamphlet of my short story entry for the 2012 Sunday Times Short Story
Competition, "Sunday Girl", which runs to a massive 16 pages in hard
copy, and is also available in e-pub format.
Simply like the page and then send me an email or FB PM
saying whether you'd like the hard copy version or the e-pub file. [Data
protection small print: this data is purely gathered for the purposes of this
exercise and will not be used to bombard you ceaselessly with garbage and
witterings.] This offer will run til 1st July 2012, or until I reach 100
followers, whichever is the sooner.
If you've already "liked" and you want one, ask
your OH or a friend to like me!
STEVE
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.
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