Thursday, 14 September 2023

22 Childhood Poems

Planet Earth (~1987)


It has five blue oceans of water and sand.

It has seven continents of beautiful land.

It needs the sun for heat and light,

Otherwise, it would snow all day and night.

It goes at 66,000 miles an hour around the sun.

It takes 365 days on its yearly run.

It has one moon and it borrows its light,

Which is sometimes crescent and always white.

The biggest creature on Earth is the whale,

As big as a cargo ship from head to tail.

The smallest, I think, is the ant in the ground,

Which existed before dinosaurs walked around.

Man is the cleverest from birth.

He can kill everything on this planet Earth.



I Wish (~1990)


I wish I could drive a spaceship in the sky

To Jupiter and other planets.

I wish I had wings to fly,

But not to another planet.

But only like a bird beneath the clouds,

Or like the powerful Archaeopteryx.


I wish I could run as fast as light.

I wish I could draw perfect circles.

I wish I could measure a thousand galaxies at night.


I wish I knew how many degrees of heat are in the sun.

I wish I could do difficult equations.

I wish I knew how black holes were discovered by someone.

I wish I could stop wishing

Because it makes me sad.



Train to the Olympics (18th September, 1992)


The train gathers speed and hurtles on

Past beaches and straggling rocks.

A flash of red poppies and gone

Are the factories and tenement blocks.


The moon looks down on lakes and lands,

Flooding fields and flowers.

It scatters pearls in thousands,

On streams and fountain showers.


The monstrous trees with outstretched sleeves,

Wave and whisper in the breeze.

The glow-worm lights up the leaves

For the engine that groans and heaves.


The birds tremble when they hear the cries,

Of the train that hoots at night.

I have now closed my eyes

And dream of Olympian heights.



An Alien in London (1st Dec, 1992)


One by one, the lights turn on,

After a second, they are gone.

The message that the lights had shown

Is turned to blackness, still unknown.


Yellow, green, and Martian red

Pierce my eyes and hurt my head.

Crowds are rushing as if in fright,

But all ignore the winking light.


They walk upright, some black, some pale,

Or drive machines with a smoking tail.

Bound to their seats, buckled and strapped,

They curse and scowl like creatures trapped.


They feed their machines from an Ess

Through a hole in the right-hand flank.

They stop dead when the red lights shine;

To dash wildly on, green is the sign.


Many are tethered without a rope,

Whether or not they are on a slope.

The tethering posts make a ticking sound,

Which I can hear with my ear to the ground.


The food they eat is called Big Mac.

The names they use are John and Jack.

They drink Coca Cola through long straws

And greet each other by touching paws.


They gyrate round a boy carrying a bow,

Aimed towards an invisible foe.

Amidst the traffic he stands alone,

In Piccadilly Circus, a figure of stone.



Foaming Horses (9th February, 1993)


Then they receded

Once again

And with all their force


Thousands of horses

With foaming mouths

Galloped down


The wide expanse

Of the roaring sea

And flung their bodies


Onto the beach

To flood the path

And me



Heaven & Hell (March, 1993)


I enter bed and close my eyes;

In the darkness, there she lies,

A strange phantom with hypnotic powers

Leads me through the land’s great towers.

And while beneath the gates I walk,

I hear the beings of both lands talk:

In mine, the sounds of sorrow and sin,

In hers, of happiness among fellow kin.

I enter her land and amazed I behold

The colors, the riches, the gold,

Astronauts, pilots, sailors, and all.

But there in the corner I see a monster so tall

Guarding the Field of Black Living Sand,

The one evil thing that man dreads from this land,

That makes him with utmost haste depart.

In my adventure, I was the hero, central part,

But then through the gates I wandered afar

Into my monotonous polluted world, a scar

To nature and the universe.



Questions and Answers (23rd April, 1993)


Why is the moon so white?

The moon is so white

Because it’s a diamond to light up the night.


Why is the night so dark?

The night is so dark

Because all things must sleep, including the shark.


How can the shark see across the vast oceans?

The shark can see across the vast oceans

Because in its eyes are magic potions.


But why are the oceans so deep?

The oceans are so deep

Because...oh! just go to sleep.



Who am I? (25th April, 1993)


I am the Holy, Mighty, Everlasting One.

My body is of a kind that glistens in the sun.

It is composed of two gases, one the kiss of life,

The other is as deadly as a laser knife.

I am born in the mountains of the Himalayas

From a hole between permeable and impermeable layers.

I jump up and as fast as the wind I fly

Past where a sleeping fakir does lie.

Then I turn a bend and over a cliff I stumble,

I hit the hard ground with a slap and a grumble.

I swirl a pebble, forming a hole in my V-shaped bed

Rushing over a cemetery, I bless the unfortunate dead,

And quench the villagers from their thirst.

Then my body rises and my sides burst,

My body flattens, to a man I have grown,

The green fields around me are sown

With cereal crops, spices, rice, and tea.

Many others of my kind join into me,

We dance as one and sing one song.

We create and destroy and can do no wrong.

More and more join me and then I am old,

Wider is my bed and broader my land,

Stretching for miles there is fertile sand.

Once I heard a man say to another with such cheek,

“This thing pollutes us. It makes such a reek.”

They drink my blood and wash in it as well

And blame me for my mud when it starts to smell.

I then divide myself and multiply.

In the Bay of Bengal I die,

But I do not die. Who am I?



Night & Day (23rd May, 1993)


The moon and stars were out and bright,

Were holding hands and shining through the night.

There they shone on sky and sea,

And lit the earth resplendently.


The sun was out and shining gold,

Was sitting in the sky so bright and bold.

There she shone on fields and flowers,

Painting roses and peering through bowers.


The mountains were tall, were stretching high,

Peeping over clouds and touching the sky.

The rivers were reflecting the sun and the sky,

And flowing through fields of barley and rye.


The moon and stars were out and bright,

Were holding hands and shining through the night.

There they shone on sky and sea,

And lit the earth resplendently.



Henry & The Lion (2nd October, 1993)


Henry, duke of Brunswick, was a knight in the second crusade.

The eyes of his wife were blurred with sorrow as she watched him fade

Over the horizon in a boat with a thousand men or more

To fight like a good crusader and spread the Christian law.

Their ship ran aground on the African coast, only Henry survived.

The rest wore heavy armour and from the ship they dived;

Struggling for life; beneath the waters of existence they were drowned;

Trapped beneath Death’s black cloak, the Devil looking greedily around.

Henry found a deserted coast and rested in a cave.

He awoke when something touched his face. A lion he saw, but was brave.

The lion did not attack him, so he removed a thorn from its paw.

He dressed this wound with a piece of his own very shirt which he tore.

The lion was so grateful that it always followed him everywhere,

Hunting for him every day and feeding him with wild rabbit and hare.

But despite all this Sir Henry found the food monotonous

And thought of the roasts and pies he had at home: delicious.

One day, sadder than ever and giving way to despair, he wept.

Then the Devil told him that his wife was to remarry that day. Up he leapt

In fury and despair and for the Devil’s help he prayed.

The Devil said he’d take them home if he gave his soul and the deal was made.

When at home, the lion roared: all fled,

And Henry cut in half the man his wife would wed.

At the death of Henry in 1195,

The faithful lion kept watch at the foot of his bed, alive.

The Devil then entered on his cloven hoofs, tip-toeing.

He picked up the lion thinking, in the darkness, the knight he was holding.

When the Evil One realized his error, he let it go in the sky and went back.

That is how the constellation of Leo, the Lion, became part of the Zodiac.



Bannockburn (3rd October, 1993)


Brave Wallace is hanged and dead,

So by Bruce the army shall now be led.

“We shall capture the castle of Stirling

And the Stone of Scone back we shall bring.

The English we shall conquer this Midsummer’s Day,

In these lands they can no longer stay.”

Thus spoke Bruce with a voice so stern

Beside the wet banks of Bannockburn.


The Scots made a hedge of spears, it is said,

And the purple heather became deep red.

Ten thousand of the English perished that day

And four thousand of the Scots, or so they say.

Though the Scots were outnumbered three to one,

They stood firm and fought on until they won!

Never has such bravery ever been seen

As in the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.



A Childhood Memory (4th December, 1993)


Six years old and spring in Ampurias.

Cold blustery winds from the Pyrenees,

Still snow-capped, not like the hot July days.

Olive and pine-cone fires in the evening,

Glowing, exploding with a sizzling smell.

On the deserted beach soon after dawn

The feeble orange glimmer of the sun

Peeps through the snowy curtain of white cloud.

The pale blue sky stares down upon the sea,

Watching its slowly changing mirrored face.

It was April then. The waves curled over,

Mouths frothing, galloping

But all fell down before me, receded

Into the dark deep, reincarnated,

They rose to try and conquer once again,

Again, but every single time they failed.

My brother and I entered the waters

Of the cold Mediterranean Sea

To swim breast-stroke, to race, to play, to splash

Each other’s faces, while two tall Germans,

Goliath-like in strength, flexed their muscles

And did several press-ups on the beach.

Seeing us, children, swimming in the sea,

They dived in thinking the water was warm,

But charged out, shivering, shouting, swearing.

“Achtung! Achtung!” they screamed in unison.

They asked my father, “How do they do it,

Those skinny boys in these icy waters?”

“Enthusiasm,” he replied.



Highest of the High (25th December, 1993)


The highest of the high, its peak above white cloud.

The bells of Fryman’s church ring out to all aloud

To villagers from Fryman to sing and pray to God,

To fishermen in lakes below waiting for their cod,

To bakers, beggars, builders, butchers, everyone,

Even little children in the woods having fun.

Up the steps to the church a shoal of people hike,

The people of Fryman, big and small alike.



UFO (25th December, 1993)


I was sunset then, the sky was slowly fading

Into the orange horizon. Clouds hung low,

Mountainous grey over the lonely park.

Black soldiers slowly oozed out of the pores

Of the sky and merged with previous blue.

I heard a plane, flying in the distance

And looking up to see its flashing light,

Another light, above I saw,

From oblong object, silence moving,

It split in three and vanished

No plane, it made no sound

No firework, it traveled long and high

My mind could only say, “A UFO.”

But still I do not know.



Insecurity (4th February, 1994)


Five p.m.

Walking home from school

In rushed blackness swarming 

Hiding all the blue.

Changing was the sky. 

Greyish blue it stood.

No moon, no stars, no clouds, 

No spears of drizzling rain

Which drenched the playing fields, 

Whose scars now still remained

In dark grey fiery puddles 

Waiting on the street.


Menacing.

Loud and slow and clear,

The steady sound of footsteps

Approaching from the rear.

I saw not a man in front 

And dared not look behind.

I dared not run.

I dared not shout.

I shuddered,

To the echoing, deafening, loudening

Ghostly footsteps behind.

No foliage to hide in,

But leafless ogres towering. 


Vulnerable.

A house with open windows,

A mole upon the ground.

My mouth was dry,

My throat was sore,

Air no longer sweet

Against my frozen tongue.

Thoughts rushed in of warmth,

Laughter by the fireplace,

Snuggled up in bed.

A cold hand touched

My shoulder.


A friend 

Just passing by.

The dark no longer

Was a fear.

The dark I feared no more.



Love and Death (5th May, 1994)


Though I am young and cannot tell

Either what Death or Love is well,

Yet I have heard they both bear darts,

And both do aim at human hearts;

And then again I have been told

Love wounds with heat as Death with cold;

So that I fear they do but bring

Extremes to touch and mean one thing.

—Ben Jonson (1692)


Love would mould the world together,

For its grasp abides forever,

But, alas! Touched not are some hearts

By wily Cupid’s poisoned darts.

Death is the fate of all living things:

Plants, birds, fish and creatures with wings.

I believe it not to be so cold,

But new life: a cure for the old.



From His Coy Mistress


Had we but world enough and time, 

This coyness, lady, were no crime. 

We would sit down, and think which way 

To walk, and pass our long love’s day. 

Thou by the Indian Ganges’ side 

Shouldst rubies find; I by the tide 

Of Humber would complain. I would 

Love you ten years before the flood, 

And you should, if you please, refuse 

Till the conversion of the Jews. 

My vegetable love should grow 

Vaster than empires and more slow; 

An hundred years should go to praise 

Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze; 

Two hundred to adore each breast, 

But thirty thousand to the rest; 

An age at least to every part, 

And the last age should show your heart. 

For, lady, you deserve this state, 

Nor would I love at lower rate. 

 

But at my back I always hear 

Time’s wingèd chariot hurrying near; 

And yonder all before us lie 

Deserts of vast eternity. 

Thy beauty shall no more be found; 

Nor, in thy marble vault, shall sound 

My echoing song; then worms shall try 

That long-preserved virginity, 

And your quaint honour turn to dust, 

And into ashes all my lust; 

The grave’s a fine and private place, 

But none, I think, do there embrace. 

 

Now therefore, while the youthful hue 

Sits on thy skin like morning dew, 

And while thy willing soul transpires 

At every pore with instant fires, 

Now let us sport us while we may, 

And now, like amorous birds of prey, 

Rather at once our time devour 

Than languish in his slow-chapped power. 

Let us roll all our strength and all 

Our sweetness up into one ball, 

And tear our pleasures with rough strife 

Through the iron gates of life: 

Thus, though we cannot make our sun 

Stand still, yet we will make him run.

—Andrew Marvell (1681)


If only you would bide your time

And serve me well with faith sublime,

Then I would banish all your fear,

Dispel the doom approaching near.

“Please,” you would say, “don’t go away.”

And I would say, “Another day.”

When your love is truly tested,

Then, like birds, we would be nested.


But never would I wish to stay

And watch love grow and then decay.

Why do you fret about the time

And try to tempt me with your rhyme?

For if I made you stand and wait,

Your fiery love might then abate,

And into ashes all your lust

An emerald with a coat of dust.


Now, therefore, quit your verse untrue.

Oh why pretend I don’t love you?

But bear in mind I serve the moon

And cannot marry you so soon.



The Eagle (21st May, 1994)


He clasps the crag with crooked hands;

Close to the sun in lonely lands,

Ring’d with the azure world, he stands.


The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls;

He watches from his mountain walls,

And like a thunderbolt he falls.

Alfred Tennyson (~1851)

 

The sky falls not upon his head,

The sea with Death dissolved like lead

Coats not his body fatal red.


He soars above both hill and vale,

Plunges—all forest birds do wail

Its living prey it doth impale.



Lament for Hyoi (11th June, 1995)


Neither the grass grows here,

Nor the flowers bloom;

Even the sky looks down

On the mountains’ gloom. (Anon.)


The shining sun descends in haste;

From Hyoi’s death it turns away.

The divine witness of a tragic waste

Offers not a single hopeful ray.


Under moss and leaves his body now lies,

Lit by the stars and pale Thulcandra.

Over his heart an eldil flies,

Above the expanse of the broad harandra.


To all our hearts Hyoi was dear;

He became hnakrapunti, this warrior so great.

He slew the mighty monster with a ferrous spear,

But then with hmâna he met his fate.


Yesterday the river was a sapphire blue,

Flowing but never reaching the sea.

All the hrossa were singing and Hyoi too.

But today there’s no poet to go fishing with me.



Spinning Coins (1995)


The world holds a thousand coins that spin.

Mortal islands moving with free will.

Predestined, power of choice and sin.

Values change. Every day lives fill.


All equal spinning dust: king, serf, clown

Waging war against the clock was killed.

Deepest thoughts and actions written down.

One page of eternity is filled.


Though by Nature’s laws mankind is spun,

Society gains, when each man joins

Knowledge, science, thoughts, all arts in one.

The world is a thousand spinning coins.



Le rĂŞve (15th May, 1994)


Il y avait un homme qui a rêvé

Qu’il Ă©tait en train de se lever

Mais il a pensĂ© que c’Ă©tait

Un rĂŞve qui Ă©tait

Un rĂŞve dans un rĂŞve qu’il rĂŞvait.


Approximate Translation: 

There was a man who dreamt

That he was just getting up,

But he realised it was a dream

That was a dream in a dream he was dreaming



La Vie (3rd September, 1995)


La vie est un rĂŞve du seul et unique ciel:

Aussi amer que le citron et aussi doux que le miel,

Une chaîne de choix ou une série de problèmes.

La Terre est un paradis perdu mais aussi mĂŞme

Un paradis retrouvé où on passe

Nos jours de joie sur sa jolie face.

Quand nous mourons, nous nous réveillons

Et voyons le vrai monde oĂą nous habitons. 

 

Approximate Translation: 

Life is a dream under the one and only heaven:

As bitter as lemons and as sweet as honey,

A sequence of choices or a multitude of problems.

The Earth is a lost paradise, but equally

A paradise re-found where we spend

Our days of joy upon its pretty face.

And when we die we shall wake up

And see the true world in which we live. 

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