Friday, March 28, 2025

 1348

The fields lie heavy, brown with broken soil,

Skirted by thin hedges and dull trees

That watch the ruttted silence, standing gaunt,

Until their branches mutter in the breeze.

No rats, no rabbits, no birdsong from the sky,

No sign of life, no hint of coming spring,

No cattle out to pasture, no new lambs,

No buds, no green, no insects on the wing

To hint that under all this sense of loss

The future fights to break unto the light;

Each root stabbing down as shoots rise up

Before exploding, ravishing my sight.

While you, who had this planned right from the start

Enjoy the silence of a thankful heart.


Brian Hick March 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 28.3.25

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

 1346

With the weather so bad, I thought it must be snow,

Those branches lined with blobs of brilliant white

Against the starkness of the bark beneath

Until they shimmered in the early light

And blossom drifted on the morning's breeze.


Surprised, I looked again and caught my breath;

The railway bank was dappled, overcome

By early Spring, as if a lingering death

Had been laughed off and shafts of the unseen sun,

Oozing through the trees, touched some with gold

And warmed each sleeping bud, returning hope

Of rebirth and the end of winter's cold.


So after days of darkness and of doubt

You smile on us with February's rout.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 26.3.25


1347

A  bed

So comfortable

I did not notice.


Brian Hick February 2014



Monday, March 24, 2025

 1345

During the storm the birds had disappeared

But this morning a blue tit fluttered through,

Stopping briefly at the coconut,

Before it dived across the hedge onto

The barren branches of the only tree

Left in our garden.  It soon flew away

But a pair of blackbirds swooped down to the fence

Eyeing the line of seeds, but did not stay.

A sparrow landed, flustered, hesitant

Then two wood pigeons dropped onto the shed

'Til, singly, they pecked their way along the rain

To find the sesame seeds among the bread.

            Spring seems a long way off but this quiet morn

            Life returned with birdsong in the dawn.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 24.3.25

Friday, March 21, 2025

 1344


After a morning's downpour

The dipoles on Firle Beacon

Are silhouetted by the sun

In ever-bluing splendour.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 21.3.25

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

 1343


Why is it so hard to speak of love?

You'd think that after all these years

Together, as the future nears

With warning of a call to go above,


We'd find it easy to share what we feel;

And yet these thoughts are seldom heard,

Their sentiments, a little word

Too often used for casual appeal


To raise an answer where the heart may be

Less passionate - less truly real -

Than what our silences conceal;

Our hearts secure from what the world can see,

But can't hear - and never will from those

Who know the truth, but keep it hid -

Our secret, one we know will live

Far longer than the gushing tweet or prose


Which pass for love, but vanish with the light.

Our love may not shout out loud

To draw attention from the crowd,

But its flam burns ever true and bright.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 19.3.25

Monday, March 17, 2025

 1342


Late afternoon sun

On the wall above the bed?

No, just a street light.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 17.3.25

Saturday, March 15, 2025

 1341

If you said that you no longer loved me

That all that we had shared was gone for good

All memories wiped clean, all pain extinguished

A sterile gap where our love once stood,

How could I endure such mere existence

Alone, deserted, every hope denied, 

Every plan discarded, every action

Futile, as every moment died.


Yet I know that this can never happen

Your love endures despite what I might do

Your love outlasts the upsets and the tantrums

Your love is always there to see me through

And I will love each heart-beat I am given

For everything I know of love - is you.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 15.3.25

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

 1258


My watch has stopped

My mobile phone is low;

Soon I shall be timeless.


Brian Hick March 2013


1259

A White Horse?


Compare and Contrast;

Subtle Bronze Age figure, with

Wallinger's White Horse.


Brian Hick March 2013

Monday, March 10, 2025

 1256


I do like Big Wok

After five courses I don't 

Need the Gavescon.


Brian Hick spring 2013


1257


          Yat was right

My imagination flows freer

      Away from home;

            How sad.


Brian Hick spring 2013

Yat was one of his tutors at The Drama Centre where he studied direction.


Friday, March 7, 2025

 1340

Somerset levels


The bread was burnt, and there was no excuse

Save sleepless days and endless nights

Running from the Dames whose lights

Flickered out beyond the leaking sluice,


The rancid meres, the fields of rotting corn.

The bread was burnt; the young man slept

Oblivious, as the women kept

The fire banked, waiting for the dawn


And certain death, once the Danish force

Found the causeway through the marsh.

Pointless to say something harsh,

No need to make his waking any worse,


She broke the bread and wrapped the better part

In cloth torn from her husband's cloak,

Forcing it, even before he spoke,

Into his hands, smiled as she made a dart


Towards the door and disappeared from sight.

He rose unsteadily, still weak,

His mind still too confused to speak,

Took up his knife and moved towards the light.


Mist lingering on across the fetid field,

Silent but for water birds

Whose plaintive cries could just be heard

Beyond the copse, where spilt blood congealed


And crows pecked out the eyes of men he knew.

The midday sun was lost in cloud

As he stumbled, his head bowed

Against the squall, the angry gusts which blew


The needle points of rain against his face,

Blurred his sight and stung his eyes,

Confusing everything that lies

Before him, as if he should embrace


Death as a welcome change to all the pain,

The loss, the torment and the stress

Of battle.  In his weariness

He almost stumbled on the figure lain


Beside the dyke, curled tightly in its cloak.

No sign of wound or injury,

He dropped down upon one knee

And shook gently until it awoke.


A hermit, perhaps a solitary friar,

Stared up at him but did not try

To move away or question why

He too was there, so far from home or fire.


The young man took his knife and cut the bread,

Headless of his pressing need

Or of any selfish greed,

And shared it with the man who ate and said,


'I could have been a Dane, for all you knew,

Armed ready to take your life,

A single stab, no need for strife,

An unseen end - dropping from the blue;  


And yet you feed me, as if I were your wife,

Without inquiring who I am

Or where I may be from

As if you'd known me all of your short life.'


'If your cassock is not a pretense

And your saviour is the son

Of God, who died to make us one,

Then breaking bread together's no offence,


And we are blessed that, even as we run

To save our lives, there is no shame,

Where we are gathered in his name

And he is here, and his love makes us one.'


In simple silence they ate up the bread

Then standing quickly moved away

Across the marsh, each to obey

The call within his heart, where're it lead.


That night the young man dreamt, and seemed to hear

St Cuthbert - for the man was he

With whom he'd shares his bread that day - 

Blessing him, confirming he was near


And would be with him as he persevered

To push the Danes back to the sea

Bring peace and stability

To England and the faith which he revered.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 7.3.25

         

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

 1339


The mud-splashed windows of the Hastings train,

Trundling down through Robertsbridge and Battle,

Can't expunge the fierceness of the sun

Though creeping darkness oozes from the sea

To lurk behind the deepening silhouette

Of beech trees, flat and stark, along the ridge.


Short tunnels and dank cuts block out

The waning rays, and every passing bridge

Snaps shut the lingering image of the woods

Made hazy, as each fast dissolving copse,

Unfocused, washed out, merges into one,

All colour faded to amorphous grey.


The landscape disappears into night

And we must wait for the return of light.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 5.3.25

Monday, March 3, 2025

 1338


Another wintry dawn, another day

Of searching for enough to eat, before

The darkness and the ice return to claw

My mind, and steal my life away.

Alone upon the rooftop ridge I sit

Aware that any second I could die

Mauled by a cat or pierced by eagle's eye

Yet unobserved  by those who daily flit

Below me, without compunction or concerns

For anything that does not meet their need,

For shattered bodies as they sate their greed

Careless while the world contorts and burns.


Everything seems poised to take my life

Yet your love lifts me up above the strife.


Brian Hick February 2014

©copyright Sally Hick 3.3.25