Congratulations to Mrs Dermott-Bond Mrs Dermott-Bond has been chosen to be Warwick’s Poet Laureate for the year having entered and won a poetry competition which was part of the Warwick Words Festival in the summer. We are thrilled that her creative talent has been recognised in this way. Mrs Dermott-Bond plans to spend her year as poet laureate encouraging and supporting young poets. Well done, Mrs Dermott-Bond. The Curator I am the curator You are intricate. Beautiful from afar I am beginning to see you in perspective. Up close: woven small patterns Tirelessly detailed I’ve looked from different angles You are abstracted in colour But so real you seem to jump and move. The room is cold and frigid. Curving in new directions, Bending with the light, you laugh- The silence is hard and taut You are part of this picture, That is crammed with life. Endless hours A body of work that is caught up In the here and now Awkward, clumsy, confined within blank walls You are prolific In your own life. I want to know how to do More than just watch. A visit to the shoe shop Clarks. You were looking for New Shoes (The latest wedding is in two weeks) Reluctant faces passed us by (school starts tomorrow) ...I thought first of my red shoes my sister’s blue shoes then the excitement of the machine Thatmeasuredyourfeet. Gentle pressure of an assistant’s hands The tape sliding coldly over, The green box, Tissue paper, Little figures, (One with a hat) My sudden impatience with scuffs “Can I wear them home?” You instead Didn’t want to let your old shoes go You didn’t want them to feel left out They were your reliable allies
I felt sad At having cast those old shoes aside So carelessly. Another reckless gesture Standing on toes Stamping over feelings Only realising too late What I had given up, Having under estimated The comfort Of old friends. The Night Train To Mombasa We washed the Serengeti dust out of each other’s hair, watched in delight as small continents of brown water swirled and jolted away leaving us laughing. Already we had travelled far, trundled and flitted, seen the huge sky’s subtle curve and bend stretched and reaching, as impossible as a giraffe’s neck. Already stood still on the equator while the world spun, had imagined it coiling seaming up the earth, the invisible line that bound us together. Now, we were wrapped up against chaos, Corsetted in second class luxury we couldn’t afford. White tables stretched out As ivory blankets, knives glinted brilliantly in Colonial light. And then in the darkwe slept soundly as the night train, groaning and shuddering in old age fought with the dusty track, muttering and stuttering, whispered hidden promises of Zanzibar. For Jo, Susan and Shana
Home
The rain persists this morning and I dreamt of you last night. I don’t have to ask why – the letters we wrote rot quietly in my wardrobe back at my parent’s house. Home. Home – it trickles down the windows. Mistakes puddle and collect on the sill; memories snatched, muddled don’t leave me until long after lunch. This is Irish rain. Unrelenting . Drumming its fingers, whilst turning its head away. The dampness smells of regret and escape. Faint thoughts of you cling still. They won’t evaporate. The afternoon is spent hopelessly sifting through debris of the past. What is past and there, What is left now, here. But I still don’t know what to keep.
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