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Writings and Witterings


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Haiku #12

The bee life cycle:
egg, larva, metamorphose,
emerge in springtime

Polly Stretton © 2020

1.bee wired.co.uk

Bumblebee from wired.co.uk

 


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Haiku #11

Earth is dirt is soil
is loam is mud is the ground
Gaia third from Sun

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #10

Painting fence panels,
momentarily my soul
forgets I love wood.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #9

The thought of warm wood:
oak, walnut, yew and rowan,
lifts my heart and mind.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #8

Mabel and Tilly
play and race around the field
love daily walkies

Polly Stretton © 2020

Tilly in the meadow

Tilly

Mabel in the meadow

Mabel


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Haiku #7

Two little muttlies
scrabble over rocks in Wales
loving beach and bay.

Polly Stretton © 2020

IMG_0156


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Wait

For VE Day 2020, written for ‘Voices of 1919’ compiled by Mike Alma (Hen Race Press 2016) but just as relevant for those coming home in the Second World War.
Wait.jpg


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Servants of the Wars

The women who served in the two world wars,
who gave what they had, and then gave more,
the ones who waved their fiancés away,
knowing they might not return, come the day.

The army was running short of men,
too many dead to reproach or condemn,
no woman sat to twiddle her thumbs,
‘into the fray’, went buns and tongues.

They formed the Women’s Legion,
went to work to give us freedom.
Their kit of caps, jackets, skirts—khaki,
no one had time for misery or malarkey.

In droves, they joined the Auxiliary Corps,
or the Women’s Royal Air Force,
served with the men in the Medical Corps,
VADs—on a voluntary tour.

Workers in factories, cooks and mechanics,
drivers, typists, no time for panics,
the wartime state needed women’s labour,
this wasn’t a case of, ‘love thy neighbour’.

The Women’s Emergency Corps,
a clearing house, it evened the score.
The skirts ‘twelve inches from the ground’,
any less, it was thought, the men might confound.

But men had no time to be confounded
or think of skirt lengths, such fears were unfounded,
all were too busy to bask in trivia,
the focus: to win, to live through the war.

Polly Stretton © 2017

Published in:
Remembrance Anthology Worcestershire Poet Laureate, 2017
and
The Unremembered Black Pear Press 2018

 


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Haiku #6

A curious bird
perched on a spade, head tilted,
red breast and sweet song.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #5

I have discovered
speaking books audio books,
I listen happy.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #4

Crickets wasps and bees
pitch their own songs on the breeze,
anthems to nature.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #3

Lost in thoughts and dreams,
blossom breaks the focus, shifts
to smile at nature.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #2

All plants were asleep
until Spring sunshine woke them,
now they’re free to bloom.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Haiku #1

I will wear real pearls,
relics of a gentler time,
warm orbs on my skin.

Polly Stretton © 2020


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Frosted Web

Napowrimo small

Lacelike cobwebs creep the hedgerows
sharp as prying spiders’ eyes,
sequin-edged and spikily shining
clear spun sugar in disguise.

Lazy hips and haws lounge
and taut twigs cringe in fingered frost,
while fluffed-up scarlet-red and round,
a robin chirps for the worms he’s lost.

Polly Stretton © 2020

napowrimo #30

So, that’s my final poem for NaPoWriMo 2020 – hope you’ve enjoyed your daily dose of my poetry – hopefully my new collection ‘Growing Places’ will be out later this year.


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Final Bow

Napowrimo small
You were bought but a week ago,
bright and upright, blooming,
now you bow your browning heads,
like unkempt boys, no grooming.
Your fragrance, all consuming
fades away, there’s no resuming,
no comeback freshness looming,
You’re gone, no more perfuming.

Polly Stretton © 2020

napowrimo #29


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Spider Bridge

Napowrimo small

In summer, walking Worcester Bridge,
we see a sight that makes us twitch.
Others stop and peer and stare
at spiders
dancing.

We don’t dare avert our eyes
as they spin webs to catch small flies,
but we watch and wonder,
peer and ponder
at the thousands,
or at least hundreds
of arachnids,
what a show!

Our amazement grows
at the human to spider ratio,
they cluster, muster round the lamps,
they’re busy making spider camps
on lights and pillars of the bridge
lined by trapped moth, gnat and midge. 

And big fat spiders.

Polly Stretton © 2020

Revised for napowrimo #28


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Bluebells

Napowrimo small

English blue bluebell, harbinger of summer
bend and bow your weight in woods and shade,
drop your heads sweet mists of haze.
Dip down, dance, shiver shake prance,
chinkling and tinkling like infants’ laughter,
slender stems, slight tender tough,
fight off the advance of the Spanish Armada.

Polly Stretton © 2020

Revised for napowrimo #27


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Echoes

Napowrimo small

In the present, from the past,
voices echo
sayings last
even when the body has gone,
what was said will linger on.
‘My mum used to say…’
‘My grannie too…’
‘My dad would have something to say to you.’
In the present, from the past,
voices echo,
echoes last.

Polly Stretton © 2020

napowrimo #26


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Faerie Folk

Napowrimo small

They steal babies,
issue changelings,
whisk the breath from the weak and the dying,
suck on columbine, nectar, blood,
live in magical hedges in bud;
worry farmers, worry swine,
worry sheep
and creatures bovine.
With green-stained teeth,
sharp, pinlike, pointy,
bright waxed blond hair
that stands up dainty,
knuckled hands and fingers thin,
spikey nails and whiskered chins,
spite in faces, malice in eyes,
nothing can stop them;
they’re from the dark side.

Polly Stretton © 2020

napowrimo #25