With snow already covering many parts of the country we are reminded that the winter solstice and the turning of the light is not far away. We felt this would be a good time to post some new poems celebrating aspects of seasonal and spiritual renewal.
Daffodils at Christmas. A painting by Ken Smyth. His website is HERE
Daffodils at Christmas
Gay as a blackbird’s beak
your daffodils unbud
and burst into frilled trumpets
this Christmas morning,
bringing a torch of freshness
to the season’s ritual,
reminding the heart’s cold bulb
of its green, forgotten centre.
Better to have left the corner bare
than focus this bright beam
on the chill comfort I have grown to.
Better not to dare
this incandescent flame
for fear its clear and unexpected shining
blinds me into love,
and, sweeter than sap, your gentleness
enters my bones
calling my roots to draw up joy again
Chrys Salt
Willie Hershaw
POEMS IN RESPONSE TO TITLES OF OSSIAN-INSPIRED PAINTINGS
By Geoffrey MacEwan in the Scottish Poetry Library
Paintings sponsored by Callum Macdonald
commissioned by Tessa Ransford and James Coxson
for the new building for the Scottish Poetry Library which opened in 1999
The Landscape of the Golden Age
deer at sunrise climb the sgurr
above the golden valley
kings of the golden river
mountain oak, rowan, pine
where water cascades over
shield of shining granite
fertile glen, abundant sea
finest horses and cattle
great hounds at heel
a long dark or a long light
land for heroic people
bound in tribal feu
Totem and Taboo
my cup my shield my sword my field
my white-breasted woman
my son my clan my race my kin
my life my death my poem
The Warrior’s Premonition
when the wind blows from the north
when the tide is full in moonlight
when a door bangs in the dark
when a stranger crosses the path
when a heron flies downstream
when a kite cries through the mist
some death will surely follow
some blood be shed.
The Bone of Contention
See the huge white hound at the dark cave’s mouth
who will not leave though his master is dead -
the crone will bring a bone from the deer
his master slew the day he was slain by an erring
arrow from the bow of his brother
who loved the same russet-haired girl
Steeped in honour they all must die
for they cannot live with the shame -
poor loyal dog who remains to mourn
among old grey women and men.
The Hunter’s Moon
Gold torque on noble warrior
gilded path across the water
huge moon blood-red and hanging
low over timbered rafter
Hot summer on the moorland
lazy days in long grasses
flowers, dragonflies and swallows
agitated in pre-migration
Time to hunt but not for deer
time for music and lamentation
time for lust and procreation
time to seed, replenish the furrow
follow the heart, its ripe desire
The Beach of Exhausted Desire
the harp is playing, shadows falling
the highway of the sea is closing
weep no more, weep no more
leaves browning, bracken’s burning,
winter lulls the season’s fever
want no more, want no more
wind is keening, fiddles tuning
bring in fuel and build the fire
wake no more, wake no more
The Tomb of the Warrior
not marble mausoleum but simple cairn
not chambered labyrinth but narrow pit
too many bones
a gleaming brooch
his rusted sword and carnivorous teeth
Feasting and Song
Put on the ermine, don the plaid
skirl the pipes and batter the drum
dance and be merry
let whisky flow
it must be a wedding
youth is now
the calf has been killed
bread has been baked
fruit is gathered, juices spilled
grief turns to joy turns to joy to joy
for someone someday again somehow
Tessa Ransford
Angel on Mont Blanc by Jila Peacock
Winter Solstice
Night of little wind,
stillness breathing over fir trees
and the house -
turreted
with staircases and towers
and secret passages
and levels going up into the sky.
A stained-glass window
where the light is always on -
impossible fairy-tale castle
seen in moonlight.
Candle burning.
Light is turning
on the hoof of darkness
belly dark-turned to the south.
Seed of summer planted
in the hollow of the pine tree,
by the gate.
Ashen winter,
grave of secrets,
rabbits, birds
and other small creatures
who seem to come out in the open
only to die.
And the leaves of course,
lots of leaves.
It seemed so long an autumn.
But winter turns now
on the tide of night -
withdraws,
responding to some other call.
An inch or two,
scattered minutes, here and there,
the world grows – slowly -
out of darkness, into day.
Morelle Smith