More poems from Nick Hallam

Hi everyone, here is some more fantastic work from Nick Hallam. Enjoy!

 

Kingfisher

Nock and….stripe!
No twang –
Cyan, halcyon, God’s bow;

River, silver droplets hang,
Tumble, quiver, falling slow;

Welland minnows,
Cyan sang –
Arrow, gold the memory.

20 September 1995

Prospector

A Kingfisher comes to a fountain bowl
Working his claim at the water’s lap –
Panning and sieving, all seems fool's gold
As, under the birdproof mesh, close fit,
Now wobbles a bubble up through a gap –
Koi, so coy, enspangled, sit;

A young one, slight of his safety, through
Up to the, under the licheny poise
Of the stone lip’s coolness, dark green recurve,
Slivers this stiver, of gilden glim ….

Rim, sudden of sun, of a shot, turquoise,
Spliced orange, too blue, of volts, of verve –
Whence, back to the fountain-head,
His head (with the look of a forty-niner now)
Juggles, now gobbles a nugget, full gold-
Sits, cyan, halcyon, all old day dim.

11 September 2002
Forty-niner- so called for the prospectors of the 1849 Californian gold-rush

Banger

A smoke of starlings, lapwings, roars
All of the blue fire of the air,
Above my stalling, flop-wing car,
Too care-tyred now
To evoke much more than a falling-off,
A fizz, a deadstick rocketry
More suited to salads than to touch-papers.

Near Cranwell

Now, silence, aircraft gone,
Gone, their smoking blare;
Here, Summer’s name in lazy scrawl,
In daisy garlands down the wall,
A garden wall too warm to care;

Bees drone the heart of guelder,
Whilst, from the elder
A blackbird peels his juicy throat,
Strings pomegranate beads upon the air.

Why not check out the news from the wildlife enquiries team?

  • Tom:   They are wonderful!  What bliss!   - thanks so much for posting them.

  • Thank you Tom. Nick is so gifted. They are such a joy to read. I still go back and read the first poems which you posted on here and introduced us to Nick's work.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous 21/09/2010 22:23 in reply to Brenda H

    Hi Tom

    Heaven is the word

    Lovely to read literature that have such depth to it

    The author is an inspiration to us all {big smile}

    Regards

    Kathy and Dave

  • Some more excellent poems that appeared on my desk, ST BOTOLPH’S BOSTON is my favourite, I believe its about Peregrines from reading it, possibly nesting in St Botolph's church, in Boston? enjoy.

     

    TRILL

    Where did that plastic bird go,
    The yellow one you filled with water –
    That blowing through its tail
    Made a wheezing whistle, of the sort a
    Bird with asthma might have made?
    I feel now, something close to guilt –
    Reminded of its strident dribbling
    By this skylark’s lilt.

    22 March 1990

    WATER LANE – STAINBY

    Its arms about the whiling brook,
    Geese, goslings, frothy in the shade,
    A willow leans, that keeps vouchedsafe
    A corner free of worldliness;

    Kept free – that some might sully it,
    I grin, a dogged cry I hear –
    Comes, clanking, watch-goose goster now,
    Wry, orange, how the sward is green

    18 August 1997

    REVOLUTION

    Sweet skylark, fount of Englishness,
    Hairspring of early morning clime,
    Fond summer-up of hopefulness,
    Most loved beginner of a day;

    Benighted, fallen to excess,
    Some E.U. memo’s faceless crime –
    Some de Farge, knitting busily,
    Has rough-and-tumbrilled you away.

    8 November 1997

    STATISTIC

    Doubled, treble-creased he lay,
    Impotent, that potentate –
    A man of farthest orient
    Cast victim on an alien way,
    Of occidental accident –
    Car-careless, feckless pharaoh, done;

    Askew – green-gold and coppered blue,
    Charm-necklaced, reckless reign so run –
    Eyes closed, mine open, I who rue,
    Creased, crescent pheasant, lord of sun.

    3 May 1994

    KESTREL

    Three, four times out, she came to sit
    As on a feather, steadily-
    Had only thorns for eyes it seemed;

    Beak nocked upon the wind, she swung,
    An almost loose, half-flapping strip
    Of sackcloth tacked there, hazardly;
    Stood riffle-feathered, hap and chance,
    Full heartedly, half fell to free –
    Scrawled grey, dun-rusted signature,
    Drew squealing half-thing to a tree.

    3 October 1999

    TYTO

    Windscreen-wide, headlight-long,
    Rain’s hangnail and wind’s dew-claw,
    Upflies, friendless, wits on song,
    Owl aloft astride the moor;

    Sleet-slight hedgerow, huckback-wall,
    Wipers’ squint-asquinted gliss –
    Down-leaps, loveless, brief snowfall,
    Wings embracing, gape – no kiss.

    14 September 1996

    ST BOTOLPH’S BOSTON

    Sailing, abseiling, cries jackdaw with crow,
    Railing at angels, past devils they go –
    Scorning all overhangs, gargoyles, lead-spouts,
    They fall, overhauling their own falling shouts
    Down precipice faces full sheer as their zest –
    By North col, by South col, arêtes East or West,
    Come corbel, come cornice, from bell-tower flung out –
    Ropes, pitons, descenders, karabiners, they flout,
    Soar thermals, now hymnals, wild praise in their jest;
    Until, tilting at weather-vanes, come guiltless to rest.

    Forget, climbers, your tackle:
    Friends, walnuts, French chalk,
    Come, step from this window and hang like a hawk.

    Why not check out the news from the wildlife enquiries team?

  • Thanks for those, Tom - I only just noticed them on here...  I like the St. Botolph''s one, too.

  • Hi Nick - are you still around! I adore your work - so clever and perceptive!

    Jan

    Poetry helped me emerge from my Chrysalis - but my wings are still drying - so much more to learn.
    www.janscreativewriting.co.uk  updated - with endangered animals category & new animal/birds illustrated poetry book!