Monday, September 27, 2021

 

Written in memoriam of Brian’s late father John Henry Hick

762

 

You are Gone; and it’s almost a year

Since we stood mute, not knowing what to say,

Where grief transmuted all that would be clear,

For You are Gone.

 

But life has rumbled on and day by day

Though we cannot forget the pain and fear

We felt those final weeks, the gentler play

 

Of memory has eased the scars that seer,

Bringing back your smile, your quiet way,

To strengthen us as we stand waiting here

For You are Gone.

 

 

763

What’s money for!

 

What’s money for! You said, knowing that we

Were not exactly rich, but had enough

To splash out on our annual holiday.

What’s money for!

 

Though you were always careful with the stuff

It wasn’t cash that took us on a spree

But your delight to have more than enough

 

Rather than spoil she ship for the odd ha’penny

Which would not be missed, if things got tough,

When we could ride on our banked memory.

What’s money for!

 

Brian Hick

June 2010

©copyright S Hick 2021

Friday, September 24, 2021

 

814

 

Too early for breakfast

Two hours on the train

For a meeting in London –

Which explains why I came –

But we’re finally at Marylebone,

Where I can obtain

A coffee and croissant

To wake up my brain.

 

815

 

Do you think

Seamus Heaney

Writes endless rubbish

Before he ends up

With a worthwhile poem?

 

816

 

On the way to London

The carriage is silent;

I read the paper.

 

On the way back to Stratford

They’re all on their mobiles;

So no chance to write.

 

I should have known better.

 

Brian Hick September 2010

©copyright 2021 S Hick

 

813

 

On the train … again

 

I would fain

A drink obtain

But all in vain

For the Brighton train

With sneered disdain

For my delicate brain

Tells me I must refrain

From hopes to gain

Spirits to inflame

A soul which has lain

Inert, in the main,

Since breakfast in Staines

With coffee so hot that it

Scolds and it maims;

But, like the Jains,

I must not complain

(Though we British have slain

Many thousands who came)

We know it’s in vain

To attempt to complain

As we endure the pain –

Of a trolley-less train!

 

Brian Hick September 2010

©copyright 2021 S Hick

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

 

September Equinox

 

We thought the walk from Stonegate might be fun

So we parked by the church and donned our boots

Before setting off behind the school en route

For Burwash, and lunch at the Rose & Crown.

 

We should have realised quite early on

That way-marks seemed to disappear with ease

And comments like the ‘left hand of the trees’

Were little help when other signs were gone.

 

The hedge-less fields, ploughed paths, no-entry signs

All chipped away at early morning calm

Until we had to accept, in some alarm,

That we had lost the route and must resign.

 

              Plump blackberries, plucked along the way

              Gave little succour to a frustrating day.

 

Brian HIck

 

 

©copyright 2021 S Hick

 


 

1353

 

The yew tree stands next to the Saxon chapel

Older than memory, its bifurcated spine

Propped and roped to protect its fragile life.

The yew tree stands

And did so when the Long Man’s cutters grappled

With the chalk or made their way in line

Along the cursus, with skin drum and bone fife,

To celebrate the solstice, as the knife

At sunrise cut across the downs to shine

Continuance to a valley, damp and dappled.

The yew tree stands.

 

Brian Hick

©copyright 2021 S Hick

 

Equinox on Firle Beacon

 

 

Standing here, I sense the Earth is waiting;

The harvest over, the barns replete with grain,

The fields bare, receptive to the plough

Gouging out the furrows for the Spring.

 

Up here the silence of September seeps

Into my soul, the traffic far below

Muted, seen but as distant movement

In a landscape unchanged for centuries.

 

A flock of sheep across the valley moves

Slowly up the close cropped slope towards

The swollen shoulders of our Southern Downs

From where the sea gleams distant and aloof.

 

This Beacon draws me out and draws me in

To the deep joys of Earth and Sea and Sky

At one with this perceptive Trinity

Piercing to a truth too true for words.

 

I wait, as the Earth waits, trusting that Love

Will find me out, like the returning Dove.


 Brian Hick 

©copyright 2021 S Hick

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

  Larks above the Mist

 

Epona, Mother of the grain

Apple maker, source of rain;

Sanctify our homes today.

 

Epona, Mother of the herd,

Mare and newborn foal begird;

Sanctify our droving way.

 

Epona, Guardian of the dead,

Succour those whom you have led;

Sanctify our lives today.

 

Epona, Mother of the mists

Living Spirit none resists

Sanctify our upland ways.

 

Epona, life of every stream

Pike & perch, trout and bream,

Sanctify our watery ways.

 

Epona, Goddess of the sky

Lifting heavenwards all that fly

Sanctify the light today.

 

Epona, Goddess of the night

Moon and starry points of light

Sanctify the dark today.

 

 

 

 

Past the Equinox, Epona’s form

Glorifies the southern sky each night;

Pearls upon her belt, bright shoulder clasps,

Draw up our eyes, our praises and our thanks

As she leads the stallion of the sun

To spark the night with silver from his hooves.

 

Two days before we lit the Solstice fire

My father died and our mid-summer joy

Was quieter for the loss, even though we’d known

His life would not last out another year.

As his eldest, I will take his axe

Along the ridge, down to the Isis pools,

Where I will break and drown it, giving thanks

To the goddess of our hearth and herds.

But summer grants scarce time for journeying

When harvest and dropped foals demand our all,

The barley cut, the apples picked and juiced

For winter bread and Samhain’s winter wine.

Now that the cattle have been culled and those

Remaining wintered inside banked coralls

Or barned beneath our huts to that their warmth

Carries us across long winter nights

Where, even if the grain runs out and meat

Is scarce, we will survive till Solstice comes.

A steerhorn calls beyond the palisade

Summoning the stallion of the sun

To flood with autumn warmth the valley floor

Where night-guards stretch, pick up their shields and spears,

And sidle through the softly opening gates

Towards their huts, cold meat and morning mead.

 

 

I pray, while she hangs in the southern sky,

For succour on my solitary way

‘Gentle Epona, secure my pilgrim steps

Past ancient tombs –where silent bones await

The coming dead – far east along the Ridge,

Down to the sacred pools on Isis’ bank.’

Dawn, but rolling mists block out the sun

As I approach  the ancient Sanctuary.

The circling timbers, seen across the downs,

Stand like the wraiths of ancestors, alert

Yet passive to my presence and my prayer.

I leave a coin in token of my pledge.

There’s little time upon this eastward path

To pay respects to unknown ancestors

Who lie beneath thesilent burial mound

South of the track, silhouetted on

The low ridge running westward from the vale

Sacred long before bronze makers came.

The morning trumpets sound from Silbery

Rippling down to me on Kennet side

Calling to the flocks and sleeping cattle

Who wait the cull and feast of Samhain Eve.

But I must be in Avebury to join

The morning offerings of bread and salt and wine.

These stones have stood far longer than recall

And tribal myths don’t spin their origin

But thousands must have toiled to drag these blocks

From the far west down to this sacred place

Cutting the banks, raising the palisades

To honour gods we cannot even name.

I stand mute at the outer edge

While priests before me murmur to the gods

In words I’m barred from hearing till the day

They speak them over my now lifeless corps

Preparing my soft body for the birds

My bones for burial and my soul for grace.

All ceremonies done, I can set out

Though mists on every side make all seem strange

And paths, familiar to me, melt away

Into a bland, damp greyness where the sound

Of frightened birds, aroused by my soft steps,

Are the sole traces of a living world.

Mid-morning, but the mists have not dispersed

Culling the path to a stone’s throw ahead.

Within the grey, a darker shape appears

Forming itself into a monstrous head

Vast and threatening as I approach

But smudged of detail or identity.

Only when I’m close enough to smell

The moss and hear the sodden branches drip

Do I begin to see the blackened trunks

Of the beech copse, sacred to Sol Epona.

Tiptoeing in, the golden canopy

Drops its quiet blessing on my head.

My mind is drifting, almost to prophecy,

As I climb the hilltop, where we herd

The horses for the winter, sensing that,

Two thousand years from now the Iron Folk

Will raise a fortress, Beranburgh by name,

To expel the herders from our native land.

On open downland, along Smeathe’s Ridge,

The feral horse herds are left free to roam

Before the Beltane cull and the skill

Of metal-priests who cast the bronze into

The bits and bridles, broaches and spear-heads

Can tame the noblest stallions and mares.

I move on through wooded paths, across

The River Og, and into copses where

Plate mushrooms drip their primordial slime

Onto the rotting leaves and sodden moss

Clogging my feet, chilling bone and mind.

A wind cuts from the east as I emerge

Onto the upland moor, where grazing herds

Are silhouetted dark against the edge,

Moving silent as they crop and watch

Each other, until one breaks free to canter

Off to disappear into the mist.

The valley drops away from Pillow Mound

And on the southern side, a white mare stands

Alone, unmoved, as if she might become

One with the hillside and an icon cut

Like other figures, deep into the chalk.

The larks above the mist which drew me on

All yesterday have vanished as I squelch

This early morning back towards the ridge

And that ancestral tomb which sits just west

Of Dragon Hill and Uffington’s White Horse

Leaping with the sun into the east.

Seen from Dragon Hill, the Horse leaps westward

Sinking its head beneath the rough-cut mounds

Yet, close to, its form seems to unwind

Vanishing in arcs of blazing light

And casual hints of where it might have been

Linger as chalk scars in the turf.

My way runs through a beech wood where the trunks

Stand like the ritual way, leading me

Down naves of skybound columns, canopied

In shimmering gold, entwined with ivy polished

And patterned like the snaking armlets, cast

Cut and burnished for the goddess’ praise.

As stars appear and the new moon rises

I set a bothy for the long night’s rest

Stacking branches and the lying moss

To keep the wind from chilling me too far,

Warm beneath the wolf-skins and the furs

Of squirrel, ferret, weasel and black mole.

Day break, and the mist which lay unmoved

Has vanished, though the sky above’s still grey

And the wind which dropped as the night fell

Cuts keenly as I break my fast, before

I start my last day towards the confluence

Of sacred streams and this long ridgeway path.

The country here is changed, the copses, filled

With fir and ash, darker and denser set

Between the open downs where herds still roam

Or race across the open headed moor.

A flurry of finches bobs from hedge to hedge

Keeping a gentle distance from my face.

Unseen above, three larks seem to mock

A kite hovering, hungered after days

Of mist which kept him from his prey

Lurking, preening in the autumnal fields.

Two thousand starlings flow silent across

Then lift to murmur in the evening light.

A wood so full of rooks, the trees could be

Alive, but one by one they rise and circle

Silently until the sky is darkened

By their flight, and all the noise is stilled,

As they cloak the evening with their wings.

The pathway drops toward the valley floor

Where the river weirs and shallow runs

Allow a crossing even at full flood.

 

Here beside the shrine I break the axe,

Cast it in silence out across the weir

To vanish in the water’s broken edge,

As if it had never been, and I

Who cast it, will as quickly disappear

To leave no trace, save fleeting memories

Among the few I loved and who loved me.

 

©copyright 2021 

Monday, September 20, 2021

 

The Roman Bath – a sonnet

 

Julius Caesar came here for the iron

Ignoring Bannatyne’s imperial worth

But Caratacus, ever one to try out

New-fangled things, build us this splendid bath

In AD 51, as you’ll have noted

When reading Mr Brisco’s little guide

To Summerfields’ palatial house and garden

Before you wandered down to sit beside

Our Roman Spring, with its lion heads (now missing;

Stolen by some Vandals in the night)

But if you close your eyes for just a moment

I’m sure that you can conjure up the sight

            Of ladies, lying languid, in the sun

            While young men oil themselves before they run.

 

 

 Brian Hick

This poem concerns a small Roman spring in the woods near Hastings museum.

 

©copyright 2021

Thursday, September 16, 2021

1652

The Ash Tree


In the grey morning, gulls drift overhead

As we drift on towards Waterloo East.

Autumn has returned and in its chill

There's little sense of fruitfulness or Keats'

Abundance as the sodden trackside trees

Await a rotting death of fallen leaves.


The train is silent though the seats are full

As if we were a far-flung family

Returning from the funeral of a child

Each caught up in a passive reverie

Of unrequited grief - the silent pain -

Of loss for love which will not come again.


Outside my office window the ash tree

Waves and shimmers in the autumn sun

Calling me from this depressive verse

Back to a reality long spun

In days of warmth and light, which never cease

When love's compassion brings love's quiet peace.

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

 1651


The horizon looked as if a child had drawn

A thick blue line across a pale page

Leaving the sky and all the sea below

Like some vast mirror, so I could hardly gage

Which was which until, almost unseen,

The brown sails of a Thames Barge caught my eye

Cutting slowly towards Beachy Head

Its silent form securing sea and sky,

As if the chaos of the universe

Could be resolved by one simplistic sight,

A tiny speck to confirm up and down

And make me realise that I was right.

             If only all the problems that confuse

            Could be absolved by such a simple ruse.