Wednesday, March 16, 2022

A Poetic Blog

 

 


If the 2020-2022 (so far) pandemic has meant nothing but negative, it has certainly opened the eyes of the world to a new way of thinking. In fact the concept, “thinking about thinking” has become a very real part of our lives. Time has taken on a new dimension. No longer does time fill a 24-hour span and remind us of appointments, meetings, when to fetch the kids from school, supper time, breakfast time, dinner time, sleep time, time to relax… Time is now calculated in terms of time spent in a location. The bedroom, bathroom, lounge, dining room, kitchen- these are now time encompassing places under the heading “lockdown” or “staying at home”.

Staying at home is a time! And in “thinking about thinking” whilst within the staying at home time, the world has become eminently creative. People have discovered talents, talents that would never have surfaced had the pandemic not crept across the world as a virus from Wuhan to wherever.

For me “staying at home” has rekindled a love of writing and in particular of poetry. Whilst not all of the poems written and commented on in this collection have been written during “lockdown”, many have resurfaced from old tomes resting quietly at the bottom of an undisturbed box of memories. Perhaps for someone, the reading of these may too, kindle a hidden flame, and get the creative juices flowing. Or allowing some long-forgotten memory to resurface with a gentle but emotional tear flowing down a cheek.

If either happens, my writings will not have been in vain.

Written in “free verse” with some elements of rhyme scheme and generally iambic in nature with stressed/unstressed syllables enabling a hopefully easy reading of the poems.

All poems are original and arise from the pen of the author who writes under the pseudonym, Raymond Bruce, or simply RB.

At the Bottom of my Garden

There are no secrets at the bottom of my garden-

No strange misshapen thoughts to warp the bark

of some eternal tree.

Just me!

And I am open.

No Myrtle hedge surrounds

nor ivy clings- just a mere trace of thistle;

Food for the bird that sings

its aimless melody to some autumn sky.

There are no secrets, but a mystery.

RB

Commentary: The human psyche is inevitably able to accept a myriad of thoughts, like the garden I sat in and pondered in one late Autumn- Nature gives its all to us, yet is a mystery. And we? We may well be willing to open our minds but yet can remain unfathomable. As I reflected on nature in all its mysteries, the one thought that became central was that one cannot wall in nature.  One has merely to see how the town of Pripyat built originally to serve the nuclear power-station, Chernobyl, and how it has, since being abandoned in 1986 , been retaken by mother nature.

Growing Old

I wonder where we’ll be

when all our tomorrows

have become yesterdays.

When the petals of

your rose- reflected cheeks

are in the winter of their bloom,

and the silence that we shared

is real-

Perhaps then together

we can share the fruits of our vine,

and in the headiness

of our matured casks

with crystals clinking

our mingled tastes…

I wonder where we’ll be

when all our tomorrows

have become yesterdays.

RB

Commentary: Growing old gracefully is something we perhaps all aspire to. To share this with a soulmate as both share their long walk through the various stages of life is possibly one of the most magical things one can do.

Dune thoughts

Is it caramel or is it burnt sienna sand?

I let it trickle through the fingers of my hand.

A hundred years, a little heap of land,

A thousand years in front of where I stand.

RB

Commentary: The arid ecoregion known as the Namib desert has vast oceans of sand of many shades of gold and brown which shifts and changes shape daily as it has done for some 55 million years. A mere 4 lines with end rhyming tell the story of a desert dune measured not only in size but in endless time.

Truspiëel

Die gedreun, die gedruis

van die wind

en die wiel op die teer-

‘n weggaansgevoel-

weg van gister; en

soos die tyd-verspulde oomblikke

wat kleinword in the truspiëel

van die verlede.

En tog, die aankoms van die hede

verby die oogvenster,

tot hedeverlede as deel uitmaak

van toekoms:-

Wat is môre dan

voor dit vandag gister word?

RB

Commentary: The poet looks into the rearview mirror as he leaves a town he lived in for almost a decade and “sees” his yesterdays in the mirror. The poem is written in Afrikaans, which is one of the 11 languages recognized as official and spoken in South Africa.  He refers to the gedreun and gedruis as the sound of the wind as the car accelerates (a roaring and whistling  sound) and the sound of the car tyres on the tar. A feeling of leaving, away from yesterday and how moments in time have been literally spilt and become smaller and smaller in the rearview mirror of the past. He then reflects on the present and future as it rushes into his view and then past him through the window of his eyes. These become the present and the past together and make up the future. He closes with the question: What is tomorrow then before today becomes yesterday?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Walvis Bay- I

Let me think only of you;

Dune wrapped and cold sea lapped

as you nestle silent

At the edge of time.

What passing moment careless

by some god-child left you

stranded here,

whilst greener things

to distant places flew?

Ah sad; you answer not,

but ageless to some soft dumb

footprint point and wistful smile…

And I, lost, bewildered, only stare-

Until a single echoed thought

reminds me brief-

The owner of that footprint brought

me to you,

a thousand years once long ago-

yesterday!

RB

 

Commentary: The port town of Walvis Bay in the southwest of Namibia was the original stopping place for the early Portuguese explorers and holds a rich history of its indigenous peoples, the Nama (Topnaars) with their very special culture. Walvis Bay is also the second biggest city in Namibia (according to population size) and the largest port. Whilst it has, over the years, been greatly developed, it once was a town of salt roads and some 16 fishing factories, many of which no longer operate.

Shortly after arriving in Walvis, I sat pondering the bleakness, the fact that very little green existed, but all was shaded in treacle colours, browns and shades thereof.  Yet amidst it all there existed something quite magical. The dunes, the sand, the cold sea had been there for thousands of years and who was I to question its very existence but rather to sit and celebrate.

Pa se Kind

En hier sit ek eensaam tussen die herinneringe

van gisteraand en gister;

Waar is die heilige gesiggie wat sag en glimlaggend

daar in die oggend son oor die ‘brekfis’ tafel

vir my soos ‘n winkende sterretjie gekyk het?

Dink sy aan my soos ek aan haar, of het die glimlag

saam met die koms van die aand sku met die son ook verdwyn.

Maar dit kan nie wees nie-want hier in my hartsak

het ek ‘n gedeelte van die ewigheid-

en die ewigheid glimlag nog vir my.

Hou my, my kleinlief vir daardie intieme moment tussen

slaap en wakkerheid,

Vir daardie oomblik wat nog nie gister, môre en vandag

is nie-en verewig my in jou drome.

Want ek wil ‘n deel van jou wees, onskeibaar en heilig.

Soos dons wil ek jou omhels en teen die koudheid van die lewe

wil ek jou beskerm.

Gee my die sleutel tot die kamer van jou klein hartjie dat ek mag intrek

En saam sal ons die môre toekoms waag.

RB

Commentary: Life has passed by and his little girl, his firstborn has moved on in life and no longer shares his world but her own with her own family. The poet reflects on the intimacy of raising a child, especially in his mind that of a girl-child. How he wishes he could still protect her from the roughness of life and in a sense “carry her” into whatever future there may be.

The translation into English is below:

Daddy’s Child

And here I sit alone  (lonely) between the memories

Of last night and yesterday,

Where is the holy (chaste/perfect) little face that soft and smiling

In the morning sun across the breakfast table

Looks at me as if a sparkling star?

Does she think of me as I think of her, or has the smile

Together with the arrival of the night (becoming older-an adult) shyly with the sun also disappeared.

But that can’t be- because here inside my heart

I have a piece of eternity-

And the eternity still smiles for me.

Hold me, my small love for those intimate moments between

Sleep and being awake.

For that moment which is not yesterday, tomorrow or today- and make me eternal in your dreams.

Because I want to be part of you, indivisible and holy.

Like cottonwool (duck feathers) I want to hug or hold you against the coldness of life

Give me the key to the inner room of your small heart that I may move in

And together we can face the future of tomorrow.

RB

On a Christmas Desert - Namib

Sing me the purple quiet of the desert eve

When the mist cloaks softly and the dunes drink deep-

Give me a hand as we footstep the deepening hue

And chill through the tumbling mists so timeless.

On thorny path and rock- strewn land,

Did Christ Himself not echo nail torn feet

on some once familiar strand…

Is this strange desert view but brother to His one too?

Ah He with majesty stood unwilling King presiding;

And who’s to judge the rough -hewn path

We tear from broken land, from broken feet and broken hand?

Eden’s toil beyond the realms of death is grand

And this our land un-Christlike will not forget…

Will grow burnished red as in the sunset with Another’s blood

And anguish sounds will Nightingale sweet soft fill

The tear- stained misty air…

But let us rather love-filled nurture that one green leaf

Of joy left so long ago by a baby Boy

And grow hands clasped to the beckoning thirsty future

Of our tomorrows.

RB

Commentary: There is something truly magical that grips the soul as one considers the beauty created by God in His nature. And in this case as he walks quietly on Christmas eve with the desert scene and coastal waters before him, the poet is drawn to muse that Christ Himself once was placed in a desert to be tempted and later how he was torn and crucified, and the land blood-stained red. There are images of the anguish of His death and beginnings of our own part in His pain since Eden… But it being Christmas eve the poet ends with a positive note as he remembers the Christchild who enables us to “thirst” no more even in a thirsty land.

 

 

 

Marsala

I seek the substance of my soul

Within the patchwork quilt of memories-

The thread therein

rolls sea-fog like towards the dim brilliance

of morning shore thought-

An empennage

holding the sunlit mind on course.

And yet the very freedom

Is a Martingale restraining thoughts

Which o’erleap themselves

To reach beyond the sun-fingered fog

of the Letheian mind.

And I, in jocular defiance turn

to offer a libation to my prudish gods.

With sweet Marsala and savoire-faire

do beguile the wards of sanity

and rest from my abortive quest

RB

Commentary: An almost tongue in cheek reflection on life made by the poet as he enjoys a glass of red wine (Marsala). I seek the substance of his soul (who am I and why am I here) amidst a myriad of memories, but they are as dim as a sea fog as one attempts to think in the early morning as one who has yet to awaken properly. He uses almost inappropriate words to describe how he struggles to keep his mind focused (empennage- used in aeronautics meaning the surfaces on a tailplane enabling an aeroplane to fly straight) Random thoughts (Martingale series), and Lethean (forgetting the past). He raises his glass in defiance as he acts socially correctly (savoire faire) and allows the wine to dull his thoughts and rest him from what was a quest/goal he would never reach.

 

Memory

A moment

A thought

Timeless

In a breathless breath filled silence

An empty room

No.

The darkness paints

And light diffuses

We stand and sit and lie

In one-

At once

Together

Alone

Again.

RB

Commentary: A somewhat sad memory (longing) of being with someone you love and who is no longer with you.

Happiness

Consider

He said

The implications

And smiled

She smiled and close- held

The laughter

In her breast his chest

And nothing

Mattered.

RB

Commentary: A moment in time shared between two people who have a special bond

 

 

 

Midnight Thoughts

A silence as the music faded

And just the imagined sound of thoughts

left behind whispered softly.

A hug that removes all sadness?

Aah indeed

And where is the therapy

but within the words and smiles

of that friend...

A soul beyond the sublime

To wrest an anguish and carry it

Petal soft on the waves of a sunlit stream.

To laugh and be loved

To be the Teddy who listens

ear attentive

always.

To give love and expect none

and in so doing there be no space

or time

for fear, regret or hate.

Be set free to fly in the wondrous sense

of just knowing

that your story may bless the hearer

that they may understand-

 that age will always be

but beauty disguised

in the little moments and things of the tomorrows

we share.

RB

Commentary:  A follow on from the previous poem in which the poet allows his thoughts to roam freely as a reflection of the sound and thoughts one shares when the music (real or imagined), ends.

Gister

Daar’s ǹ poem sȇ hy

Iewers in my mind

Maar,

En hy peins so bietjie…

Ek moet dit net find

Hy frons en sy oë verdwyn

Agter ǹ masker van gesigsplooiende denke…

Ek het jou lief!

Ag nie wѐѐr, hy sy lag

Wat weerklink asof dit van tevore gebeur het…

Dis ǹ ‘ou’ soen maar teer; iets soos,

Ja gister, toe sy/hy nog jonk was?

En voetjies onner die tafel, langs mekaar

Innie kerk;

Ag dominee

Sulke dinge…

Daar’s ǹ poem sȇ hy… en sy glimlag met

Moeëplooitjies

RB

Commentary: Two elderly people, after a lifetime of being together, share an intimate moment as they remember the past and their love for each other.

Translation:

There’s a poem he says

Somewhere in my mind

But,

And he thinks a while

I must just find it

He frowns and his eyes disappear

Behind a mask of face wrinkling thoughts…

I love you!

Oh not again, he/she laugh

Which echoes as if it has occurred once before

Its an ‘old’ kiss but meaningful, something like..

Yes yesterday, when he/she were both young?

And their feet would touch under the table, next to each other

In the church;

Sorry Pastor

These things…

There’s a poem he says…and he smiles with

Tired wrinkles

Mathematical Thoughts

Don’t be confused by hypotenuse

It’s in your quadrant, root and all.

So look at the square

No not at Pi

It’s staring you straight

Right deep in your eye.
A line is a line

Thicker or thin

It has no width

And is certainly long

And algebra’s no, not the name of a song.

Now calculate clear

Use diameter dear.

Ah the sum of the squares

No don’t move the chairs.

It says parallel there

You don’t really care?

But it all adds up

Minus one or two

To the whole of the sum

And the sum of the whole

Then 7 x 9 will do just fine

Now I’ll leave you to it

And take down the sine.

RB

Commentary: The poet’s daughter struggled with Mathematics and this “tongue in cheek” piece of writing was intended to encourage her.

Life

Sausages lay on the brown floor,

scattered.

The pan dripped hot fat.

The element glowed red.

It was 5pm.

She cursed-
the dog ate.

RB

Commentary : The normality of daily life.

Hope

Perhaps though the world is cruel-

Kindness by One…

May so stir stilled feelings,

May recall memories,

Telling of good times,

That sadness and wickedness

Will rot in the files of darkness

To be covered by layers of time

Like dust on a holiday window -sill

RB

Commentary: Somehow the closing two lines of this poem represent the theme and that is almost a fervent prayer that what is wrong in the world may indeed be covered “like dust on a holiday window sill”. The holiday window sill representing the joy and happiness of a holiday but being obliterated by the negative yet able to be removed.

 

On the Death of a Lonely Goat

The stream trickles with the sound of dust,

cracked , brown sand, cringes;

The air, liquid lava, pulsates above the arid ground.

A dying Willow weeps in the silence,

While the blinding heat drags slowly across the sullen sky.

A lonely boned goat stares sightless at the river bed,

And dehydrated crumples to sigh in the molten earth.

And the day yawns on through the screaming solitude

Echoing death in the stillness.

The bloody orb settles on the horizon,

Heat steams from the corpse earth, stifling the slow inking sky

Darkness, the Hyena slinks and the dog howls his lament

Across a naked heaven.

A Zepherous wind scuffs softly, sifting the strangely sanguine sand.

And slowly, squeezing out the red hued sunset, Night steals in-

Peace.

RB

Commentary: A few days spent in Sossusvlei, an area of rocky desert in Namibia and a place where there is very little rain or moisture of any sort. Yet amidst this the occasional depression allows a long lost river to emerge for sometimes an extended period of time and growth of unusual/exceptional kind to take root. Inhospitable except for the hardiest of creatures. The author took some liberty in expressing the vivid scene before him using an excess of descriptive language, at times almost inappropriate yet allowing the reader to lose him/herself in the moment. Some of the animals let loose in the poem do not exist in Sossusvlei, yet the whitened bones partially covered by sand seemed to haunt the author and suggest they may well have at some time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Walvis Bay- II

It is an old man this town,

With toothless gums-

Content to suck and not to chew

No vibrant virility-

Just varicose veins

Whose calloused skin abhors…

Ideas-

Like cleansing rain they fall

To lie in stagnant pools of thoughtlessness.

Sterile, vapid vacant, a peopleless

Peopled town,

Encorpsed and not inhabited!

Oh town, with varus feet

You make your way in timelessness.

What changes wrought since once

Those ghostly ships did course your mists

And echo chains upon your shores?

When men with bolder stride,

Or was it pride with flag and fanfare did abide.

Or are these changes still to come?

Perhaps your loins are yet to spawn the seeds of life

And wrench the torpid Letheian minds

That lead you from their ‘Winters’ hibernation-

Take heart oh town-

“Tis old men they say, that rule the world today”

RB

Commentary: This poem was published in The Namib Times in 1984, a newspaper in the town of Walvis Bay Namibia. There had been a meeting to discuss the way forward in terms of the fishing industry, the military base and general progress- The result of the meeting was that there would not be any immediate progress and that the status quo would remain. The background to this decision was that the people in charge (the Mayor and the Town Council) were not willing to risk any new development as they were “comfortable” in maintaining what was there. The writer then took it upon himself to make a statement, perhaps an attack on them, but write it in such a way that it would seem that they, and the town were being celebrated.

Just

Let me slip behind your sky eyes

And wander free amidst your dreams-

When in restless night you reach out

Let my fingertips touch thoughts be there

To caress away the pain of absence.

Join me and shake off the earthly chains

To bathe in light

Far beyond the realms of banished night.

There are no secret thoughts I hold but those

Which swim amidst the fields

Of your own petalled strewn dreams.

And they are but soft reflections

Of my own in life’s rippled pool.

RB

Commentary: Romance and a lost love washes through this piece of writing. The author wishes his love could return yet knows that he remains just a part of a dream which at times is also his own.

Eclectic

I held your 5c in my hand all day mommy

And when you weren’t there to fetch me

From school,

I gave it to Paul.

It wasn’t the sound of your voice

That kept me awake last night

But the silence in between

Without you

My supper gets cold

I looked at your photo yesterday

And noticed you weren’t looking at me

Commentary: Sometimes ideas float around and stick together in the most strangest of places

Artiste

And so we entered together

Each with a plastic smile

To cover our fresh frozen thoughts-

At first it was all right

As convincing as a toothpaste ad

Until the studio lights

And we began to thaw.

Don’t look said the scriptwriter

Running to fetch the makeup artist

Leaving his pen to dance to the tune of my fingertips-

He arrived too late.

RB

Commentary: Plastic people living in a plastic world. We wander through life as marionettes very often without focus or genuine thought

To Be Nina (A dog I once knew)

Thoughts at the surface

To look brown-eyed and warm

As only the canine world can.

Shall we care

Or is the tug of a ball frolic too strong

Before we share our softness despite?

Ah yes we have no devious unkempt senses

But that to please and tease some joyful laughter

From a sad-faced master

Or mistress if you want.

To be Nina is simply to be

Commentary: The devotion of a dog is complete. They will protect and supply their total love. All that is required in return is to feed and to provide some care. And the occasional time of play. For their short space of time on this earth they give far more than they gain in return.

 

Postscript: It has been a delight putting together these thoughts amidst the challenges that the pandemic has wrought. I do trust that all who may get to read these poems will have their own thoughts elevated and perhaps be stirred to write their own and assist in attaining some of the sustainable goals of the United Nations… in the above poems I hope to have moved some to consider goals 3, 4 and 16.

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

State of Disaster - South Africa, 15 March 2022 (The Ides of March- Apologies to Shakespeare)

 There is, in my opinion, no reason whatsoever to extend the State of Disaster. My understanding is based on the Act which states as follows:

1) Section 27(1) of the Act, hereby declare a national state of disaster having recognised
that special circumstances exist to warrant the declaration of a national state of
disaster; and
2) Section 27(2) of the Act may, when required, make regulations or issue directions or
authorise the issue of directions concerning the matters listed therein, only to the extent
that it is necessary for the purpose of -
(a) assisting and protecting the public;
(b) providing relief to the public;
(c) protecting property;
(d) preventing or combatting disruption; or
(e) dealing with the destructive and other effects of the disaster.
Do we really believe that either of the above points are valid? If they are then THEY ARE NOT DUE TO COVID, BUT EXIST BECAUSE OF THE INABILITY OF OUR OWN GOVERNMENT TO EFFICIENTLY RULE! And please do not tell me that the looting/destruction of property/Eskom incapacity/Water leakages & lack of preparation for the future in terms of water (and electrical supply)/corruption... need I expand further?... can all be attributed to the pandemic! If we do continue with the State of Disaster it will be purely because of the vast numbers of masks and vials of vaccine that have been purchased and need to be sold/used! And if we are told to have a fourth/fifth booster (any type of course) it will be "for the greater good"- seriously???