Friday today, and I thought I'd write summat diff'rent for a change. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It's Friday night and strictly for a change I thought I'd write an ode that doesn't rhyme so though it won't be easy writing words that just don't scan I'll see if I can put down something new Phew! That was close, you know that I was tempted I nearly rhymed that last line in the stanza I struggled with my conscience for a while then said to myself 'sod it, let 'em wait!' so now I'll see what else that I can think of that won't be quite so hard to fit in here it's getting late and now I'm getting tired but come tomorrow I'll be rested, honest! then I'll get back to rhyming words once more I'll put them in rows all lined up quite neatly just like I meant to do it all along you'd think that it was just a little brain storm the last four lines always seem to be the hardest the ending's never easy to plan you see for the rhymes just keep on coming even through the longest night till they jump out from my mind on to the keyboard Goodnight! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See you tomorrow!
Today's Saturday, today's Saturday, and Saturday is ... Is everybody 'appy, you bet yer life we are! Anyway, here's today's little ditty, enjoy! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Saturday the ninth, could this be the gate to escape from reality and into the strange world of a fantasy where everything's great and the good, bad and ugly are home on the range? the world in a hand basket trips out to hell while the church wardens wring their gnarled hands in the cold and the old man of Hoy has a story to tell of the times before he grew so tall and so old this is the world as is now for the people a mish mash of tales and fluff Peter Rabbit could use as his tuft to tell all the sheeple to wander the hills seeking something to grab at a lifetime of stories, corked up in a bottle that's thrown like a lifeline way out in the waves to carry the message so safe in its capsule to far distant shores and unknown enclaves where strangers will read them and spark in their minds a new world of wonder to keep them amused like peeling an orange that's loose in its rind the fruit has a taste at once strong yet diffused so take out a segment and look at the colour then into your mouth pop the sweet tangy fruit the textures and taste on your tongue as you devour the flesh seem so naughty and yet feel so right these tales are the grist to the mill of our lives as we grow and mature from innocence swept into adult worlds we must all struggle and strive feeling never the expert and always inept just children we sail out to sea in our boat with an owl and a pussycat there as our crew these memories sparkle the tides as we float and drift out from ancient rhymes into the new ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Naughty and nautical seemed to flow together well in this verse. See you tomorrow, if I can get back to dry land that is!!
Today's Sunday the 10th, and here's todays missive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- January tenth, it's a week and a half since the new year, it hardly seems real that the calendar's turned again on our behalf just as though it were pinned to a wheel for the seasons roll round in a circle they come and they go every year they mark our lives out as they shuffle about and remind us with laughter and tears that our lives are forever governed by forces outside our control they trap and then catch us to pummel and match us to fit in the right pigeonhole sometimes we're pulled out and admired by those who'd our virtues extol sometimes we are led as though drawn by a thread to get close to a looming black hole there to join with the other ones who have come to stand pale and aghast I'm sure that one day I might even see you though that fateful day may be our last still the seasons continue to march on driving all those whose lives are lived there maintaining the peace as our thoughts are released and the world rotates cleansing the air for the atmosphere is a vacuum it sweeps up those thoughts we discard and gathers them in where the air becomes thin to a cloud for to save and safeguard so don't be sad if you've forgotten all the good times you had in the past at the end you're allowed to ascend through that cloud and you'll regain them all at the last --------------------------------------------------------------------------- See you Monday!
Well, today's little offering is all about the Romans and children and sport. How did I manage that you may wonder? It all comes down to the fact that there are eleven people in a football team, and in a cricket team, and January is named after the Roman god Janus. As to where the children come into it, well they form the sports teams of eleven per side, and when small they played on the stones of what was once a Roman villa in what later became the kingdom of Wessex. All this came out of my mind this morning as I sat here and looked out of the window, and daydreamed of being able to go out of the house once more some time in the future. Assuming I'll still be here in that future, because it's getting very depressing being told to stay at home all the time. It's almost like house arrest for a crime I haven't committed. Anyway, have a read of the poem while we're all still allowed to communicate via the internet, because even that could be taken away from us the way things are going! Oh, and by the way, I know there's more than eleven in a rugby team, but I invoked poetic licence to make it all scan. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- January Eleven, sounds like a sports team who knows, there just might be one hiding away from a village called January it'd most likely seem near a Roman villa down old Wessex way I can just see it now the small village hall next to the Norman church with graves all around and the post office outside the old Roman wall that marked out the villa's ancient grounds and inside the wall the grass is kept neat mowed every week to keep it quite short so the paying visitors won't get wet feet as they stroll around where once rich Romans held court but before the authorities rescued the site I'll bet children of all ages played in the rubble the villagers' playground and theirs as of right where the kids could all play yet stay out of trouble away from the road where the big lorries ran and during the war the Americans came to play their own war games, as only they can with their tanks and artillery spouting bright flame when peacetime resumed and the parish was poor that's when the NT came and offered a chance to rebuild what had once been a palace before they promised the whole area would be enhanced so years of hard labour thusly ensued to turn piles of rubble all covered with weeds once more to a pleasant place rightly imbued with historical overtones, a palace indeed with fame came more people to live near the site and the village soon filled with new children to play on the old Roman stones as their playground of right even though the NT tried to make them all pay and those children grew up into sporty young teens who needed to practice their newly honed skills of football and cricket and running in teams so new pitches were laid in the rolling green hills and now we may have a January Eleven of boys and of girls for both soccer and rugby with members left over for January Sevens well in my creative mind they all could be ------------------------------------------------------------------------- See you tomorrow! (hopefully?)
Well that is a relief. You asked me to post the first thing that came into my head and I just had an image of you running around shooting a few unwanted admirers.
It's the twelfth today, a Tuesday, and it's raining outside. Not wanting to make the day even more dismal than it already is, I tried to imagine the rain as a falling of new life onto the waiting ground, that's eager to swallow it all up, and use it to build new inspiration for an otherwise parched landscape. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Today is the twelfth and not quite a fortnight another two days to make it two weeks so what shall I write about now you may wonder as thoughts from my curious mind slowly weep they cry like the new rain that falls on the desert that's yearning for learning and aching to feel they fall like the raindrops that quench the great thirst of the new life that stirs as the rain waters heal the barren and cold wastes of meaningless thought that wander and roam through the world of the night waiting and watching for some sacred sign of a new dawn of reason that arrives with the light but the germs of the new must take their time to grow while the soil of creation awaits the rich food as the water seeps onward through cracks it will flow showered down from the heavens the meadows to flood the fields of the grass lands, the grazing for those who would wander through them, their thoughts to renew that inspire us to think and imagine the world with a new light, a muse our tight bounds to undo and let all our creation spill out on the highway let the traffic of life fill the ribbon of slate that flows through the world like a blazing hot torch that will save us from ignorance, show us our fate for the power of stories is there for us all the written and acted out script of our lives we see in the mirror our private existence as onward we ever must struggle and strive worry not if creation has stopped for a short time the new mental offspring are soon on their way new thoughts and new ideas burst up through the soil to reach for the sunlight that bathes us each day and at last we can rest from the toil as we lay eating and drinking our fill from the well that springs up new tales to tell every day as though from the glorious heavens they fell ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- See you tomorrow!
It's Wednesday Jan 13th today, and I've spent the day getting my rather specialised machining tools together ready for tomorrow, when I drive down to Poole, to work on a boat engine. Why do I do this you may ask? Well, I happen to have the special tools needed to do the machining on the engine that's necessary to refurbish it properly. I'm one of the few people left who know how to use the tooling, and who're prepared to go out to do the necessary work on the engine at the customer's premises. When it all gets a bit too much I'll see about selling the machine tools on and hopefully teach the buyer how to use them as well. That way the skills won't be lost and people will be able to continue using the ageing engines fitted to old cars, motorbikes and boats. Anyway, here's today's ditty. ------------------------------------------------------- Thirteenth today, that's one and three add them together and they make four take the one away you're left with two so tell me people what to do? should I leave the numbers this time and just accept them as they are or try to play with them some more and mess them up as with my mind? it's hard to think of what to write when head is pounding out the beat of tired eyes and aching feet perhaps I'll have an early night and rest my body goodness knows it needs the rest as do my thoughts like lines of crosses mixed with noughts help untie my crossed up toes the cool ev'ning is moving on to the night that's waiting for it sinking to the shining floor it slides into dark oblivion and there to rest until the dawn the morn will break upon the dark then I might stroll around the park the well groomed trees and perfect lawns will welcome me with open arms arms that have held many things from lover's hair to diamond rings and kept them all away from harm so dream along now as we rest relax into the old armchair don't try to work now, don't you dare put up your feet, you know it's best ------------------------------------------------------- Don't work too hard now! Take it easy till tomorrow.
Candy Gal, yes you live in Bournemouth. I drove past there at around 11pm last night as I headed home from Poole. I didn't get home till 1.30am and then had to unload the car of all the tooling I took with me to do the work at the boatyard. So I didn't get to bed till after 2am. As such I'm rather tired, with a headache, and I didn't get a chance to write my daily poem last night. So I'll just have to write two of them today to make up for the shortfall. I have a story to tell about the last time me and the missus went to Bournemouth. We went along to the beach at Sandbanks and bumped into Harry Redknapp! He was busy filming for that series of programmes he did about Sandbanks that was shown last year (or was it the year before?), but he made the time to say hello and talk to us anyway. Lovely bloke! I'll put up a poem for yesterday later on today, and another one for today after that. Bye for now!
Okay, so I managed to drum up a few lines that explain where Thursday went, for me that is. Your experience of the day was probably different from mine, but that's hardly surprising as I had a very busy day working on a big six cylinder diesel engine on a huge floating forty foot long fibreglass gin palace that has two of these massive six litre engines to power it around. I only worked on one of them, as only one engine was being refurbished. The other one was re-furbed about three years ago apparently, and so is fine. Anyway, I got up at 5.30am, had an early breakfast, loaded the car up with the rather special boring machine I own, then drove the 120 miles down from London to Poole, and a boatyard where the gin palace was out of the water and sitting on the concrete yard. There it took four of us to lift the heavy machine the ten feet or so from the ground up to the height of the rear deck, then into the cabin to lift the floor panels away so that I could work on the six cylinders of the engine. With three separate cuts required to get each cylinder bored out enough to take the sleeves that were to be fitted, it took eighteen cuts overall to get the work done. Then we had to get the machine back out of the engine bay, out of the cabin (into the rain in the dark) then lower it down again to ground level so that I could put it back in the car, and then drive the 120 miles home. -------------------------------------------------------------- Thursday the fourteenth where have you gone the rain and the fog that hemmed in the day slowly gave way to sporadic showers that wetted the ground as I looked out for the road signs not always found pointing me west to a boatyard in Poole where an engine awaited me there in its bay the cylinders worn beyond easy repair needed new liners, that's why I was there to bore out the cylinders for fitting new sleeves my machine's too heavy for one man alone I needed some muscle to help with the lifting the boat owner's son and the owner himself both pitched in to get my machine through the door then into the cabin and under the floor to where the huge engines sat stripped of their bits I machined out the cylinders three cuts for each then honed out the surfaces till the sleeves fit and with it all done then home from the coast I didn't get home until Thursday was past So Friday the fifteenth barged its way in while I emptied the car and stowed all my tools then off to my bed to catch up with my sleep my weariness dragging me into my dreams Nod is a land I've got to know well as my head hits the pillow I'll bid you farewell -------------------------------------------------------------- The poem for today follows, so don't touch that dial!
Hello again, as promised, here's Friday's poem, a bit late I know, but better late than never, as they say. -------------------------------------------------------------- Friday the fifteenth, oh what a day birthdays for some 'Happy Birthday Tom!' and time marches on and on and on a frost is a coming I'm sure of the signs perhaps we'll get snow, it's a sign of the times the bitterness burns at our fingers and toes remember to keep all of the windows closed and doors must be shut to keep out the cold I can feel myself ache as I slowly grow old and the sun shivers silently out in the blue as it watches us move about here on the ground but its glance is fleeting as the world moves round in a circle, now here's an idea a strange notion for our planet is in perpetual motion it's a state that the scientists say just can't be yet it is for all and sundry to see forever it spins and will always continue you know that I'm right what I'm telling you is true and when the sun dies and our world it is drained even then it will turn round again and again until finally swallowed by our dying star be assured of this fact wherever you are so although the time marches on to its beat through winter's chill and summer's heat the seasons will come and the seasons will go and it's late now so I'll just say cheerio! -------------------------------------------------------------- See you tomorrow!
Didn't know I could predict the weather did you? Well, when I woke up this morning it was snowing outside, so here's some nonsense about snow, and bad weather in general. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Opened the curtains and what do I see the world has turned white but how can that be it was only last night that I said it might snow now I'm being blinded by what's down below but wait just a minute there don't be too hasty it's raining outside so the snow'll soon melt then it'll all turn to slush that can be quite nasty I hope that the rain soon turns heavy and pelts then the snow will all drain away out of my sight and I won't have to contemplate wearing my boots coz I really can't walk in them try as I might I look like a bigfoot who's in a bad mood all trudging and swearing and cursing quite loud as I slide from the pavement out into the road in a cartoon I'd walk along under a cloud filled with lightning and thunder about to explode with my shoulders all hunched up close to my head as though they were earrings that flattened out sideways but they're heavy to me and they feel just like lead and if I get famous they might start a new craze so soon all the people would hunch their way round as they shop in the high street or go underground to seek out the bargains that hide in the markets all looking like coat hangers bought on a budget but listen to me getting silly and soft you know I don't mean it I'm having a laugh till my ribs they all ache and I choke and I cough so I think I'd best stop now and go run a bath ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- See you!
Hello, today's poem is a little longer than most of those I've done recently, but I hope you won't get bored reading it. Anyway, here it is. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sunday today and I had a lie in it helps me remember which day it is if I got up as normal I'd soon begin to forget which day's which and get in a tizz so I stayed on in bed till my back really hurt then got up and took my special Sunday pill then wait half an hour before quenching my thirst so the chemicals can coat my old bones while I'm still after that it was breakfast, but not until twelve I don't eat in the mornings I rest my digestion then to fill up my tum in the pantry I delve for some ham and some coleslaw, a salad insurrection the afternoon filled with internet queries about aliens and moonshine and other such things people will think I'm away with the fairies perhaps they're not wrong while I'm clicking the links but the interesting things are all there for the taking and reading the articles keeps me awake if I didn't do that I'd be in the chair dozing and wasting the day, that would be a mistake for time is the essence of what life's about we're stuck here at home for the duration it seems until the all clear sounds and we're allowed out to get back to normal and chasing our dreams our wants and desires that are just out of reach we can see them in colour in glossy paged brochures the beautiful bodies all bronzed on the beach if only I looked like the gods in the pictures sadly I don't, I'm really no oil painting no Salvador Dali would want to paint me he'd look and who knows, he might even be waiting for me to release him and set his eyes free to look for the beauty in other strange things not sorry old men who would just sit and drool in my mind's eye I see him as he deftly flings paint onto his palette and sits on his stool then strokes with his brush the quivering canvas that sits on his easel looking white as a sheet the virginal space that he seeks to encompass with stories in colour to give us a treat a vastness of detail that seeks out our eyes and through them it knaws at our questioning brains to make us all think of impossible skies as long legged elephants race on the plains of time as it watches us through it's soft dial that slowly melts over the branch of a tree or bends to creep down the side of a box that denotes the precipitous edge of the sea such art is too novel for us to take in it frightens and worries us how it can be that one man can think these things into existence and capture the thoughts for us all to see for art is an inate skill some geniuses have Dali and Da Vinci are only just two of those blessed with memory like a photograph and the skill to repeat an image so true Da Vinci could plan and paint true to his vision Dali in modern days almost the same to be able to dream the impossible with passion is so unusual as to garner great fame but now my poem has come to an end so what shall I write to finish it off I know, I'll simply cop out and send my words to you wrapped in an old table cloth -------------------------------------------------------------------------- That's all folks!