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603 · Sep 2016
Sketches of Summer XI-XV
Nigel Morgan Sep 2016
XI

under the feet
the thrumb and hum
on board (at last)

waiting waiting
to be away
for the Isles
then the
cast off

the shove of movement
the rush of sea air
on the face
away (at last)

XII

within sight this pair
owning the island
of just rock probably
covered when the tide
is full under the moon
later tonight will they
sit until the rising
water makes them move
to landfall a swift flight
away

XIII

flowers and grasses
picked when the mist
held forth over the land
filling the glass
on the windowsill
Tonight they look out
across a quiet bay
their colours firm
in the golden sunset:
sky illuminating
embroidered clouds

XIV

on the dune bank
above the bay
sweeping towards
sky cloud-lit by
sunset glow azure
light pastel blue
pink near to orange
soft lines vaporing
colour towards the dark
sounds of sea near
and sea far across
the dunes sweeping
away from the view
the bay towards a
further sea no ocean
this far further still
further still

XV

Thirteen stones
on a hillside
describing a space
a five-minute
walk around
time to conjure
a very distant past
when the land
then wooded broke
the westerly wind
These poems are part of a collection of forty-five written during July and August 2016. Thirty-six of these poems were written in the Outer Hebrides on the islands of North and South Uist,  and on Eriskay. They are site-specific, written on-the-fly en plain air. They sit alongside drawings made in a pocket-size notebook; a response to what I’ve seen rather than what I’ve thought about or reflected upon. Some tell miniature stories that stretch things seen a little further - with imagination’s miracle. They take a line of looking for a walk in words.
602 · Dec 2012
Wakefield Nativity 9:11
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
The Family**
 
When we were three
(there was a fourth on the way)
he discovered this summer place
in mid-September.
 
(there were brambles in the hedgerows
and it was windy and cold)
 
Later when we were four
and then (an accident) five,
we returned (regularly)
to remind ourselves
who we were,
who we are.
Nigel Morgan Apr 2014
When the leaves fall
and cover the concrete
with their daring script,
we pause to read their asemic form,
a kind of language universal lodged
deep in our unconscious minds.

With curve and line,
join and stem,
these nothing words reform
again with each gust of wind.

Or pinioned by grass and rain
these natural letters
in the language of leaves
remain - in situ -

and slowly curl and colour,
shimmer with dew,
glisten in sunlight, revealing
their inscription, thus:

*O friend whoe’er you are
I feel through every leaf
The pressure of your hand,
Which I return,
And thus upon our journey
Linked together, let us go.
Afterword

Poets need good titles and The Language of Leaves was one title waiting to be acted upon. The poems in the sequence I -V are little narratives: a Victorian poet waits in his conservatory for tea, an ever-observant women searches the pavements for treasures, a Japanese princess practices her calligraphy for a distant lover, a correspondence ensues between scientists father and son, a painter patiently rehearses a single stroke of the brush. There are both real and fictional people featured here. You don’t need to know who they are. The Introduction and Conclusion are poems-proper about leaves and how we read the script of their movement and being.

There is some sampling here of existing texts, and credits should include Cid Corman, Joanne Harris, Arthur Waley, The Darwins father and son, Nicholas Serota, , Francis Ponge and Walt Whitman.

This collection is inspired by a series of five images in the medium  of print and stitch by Alice Fox, to whom these words are dedicated.
575 · Dec 2012
Voice on the Telephone
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
Oh your sweet dear voice on the telephone.
Today you’re the gentle girl I so adore, 
not the woman on the line (who I much admire 
but sometimes  find - just a little scary).
It’s as though you’re sitting next to me right here
and stroking the hairs on my arm and we’re close
like this and the sun is shining - as it shone in Scotland
with all the colours of silence present in the wind,
soft music in the fragrant air, everywhere . .  . then
you and I - we hardly needed to speak  at all
we loved each other so. Scarcely could we
not touch one another or hold each other’s hand,
neither kiss at every gate nor come together –
in love’s long deep all-embracing caress.
565 · Mar 2014
The Language of Leaves 2:5
Nigel Morgan Mar 2014
Because her eyes were always
glancing downward
to see what lay at her feet
between strides or before the next step
it was inevitable that leaves would
one day summon her attention
Autumn time and the colour and curl
the drift and crackle under foot
their sculptured forms
so well curated against the drab
gallery grey-wet pavements she trod
But their very delicacy wore her down
until one day she saw a leaf
with a print mark the pattern of a boot’s
press and sole against the fallen foliage
of a Populus tremula
(or so she thought)

Taken then to her mantelpiece to dry
it slowly curled like a rug
to show only the weaver’s side
plain but variegated with nature’s stitch
ready to be carried on a merchant’s horse
this fine kilim of autumn
with its footprint signature
hidden from view from harm
on its journey over the mountains
558 · Apr 2014
In the Mist
Nigel Morgan Apr 2014
The mist had remained all day.
Curious for April this should be so.
At dawn the garden had appeared
as an undersea world
blue-tinged though
swimming in Palma Gray.
Later the town hall clock
would all but disappear from view.

My heart is so heavy he thought
despite my resolve my good intentions
How will I lift myself above this cold mist
into the sunlight I know lies so near
in the blue sky above?

At the end of the long day
so tired he could barely speak
her name on the telephone
as she bright with good fortune
caressed the ether with her words
her present laughter and her beauty
hidden by distance yet visible
in his memory’s last sight of her
hair on the pillow asleep
as he placed the glass
by her bed and crept
down the steep stairs
542 · May 2015
The Tower
Nigel Morgan May 2015
Alone unto itself
facing the risen sun,
warming cold stone
between cloud shadows,
the trees brought to green,
the birds to song.
Below, restless water.
A poet distant,
the pen held
with cold fingers.
Garbh Ard, Benderloch  56.412 N     5.472 E
541 · Oct 2013
Yesterday
Nigel Morgan Oct 2013
we’re spoilt you and I
when together
alone together
being our true selves
and true to ourselves
with only our past
the past of us together
to measure who we are

yesterday in London
I kept seeking your hand
in the press and teem
of the Saturday crowds
to feel the pulse of you
pulse in me as every step
taken every view shared
bound us together ever
deeper and beyond
passion’s deepest kiss
where words have flown
and thoughts are stilled
and now is suddenly
present everywhere
541 · Dec 2012
Wakefield Nativity 11:11
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
The Child**
 
After five of these miracles
you’d think
you were prepared for that moment
the child greets your waiting arms.
 
For some months
you’ve slept together,
even come
so really close
in the act of love.
 
Now her eyes look up for food
you cannot give.
You place her next the gentle curve
of the waiting breast.
 
Her presence dominates your waking self
and now it’s your turn to carry her.
This gift from God,
this wonder of innocence and truth,
she will become everything you are not,
and much more besides.
 
 
©  Nigel Morgan 2010
527 · May 2013
Hello Poetry
Nigel Morgan May 2013
Hello you poets
Gentle readers
Friends on the web
And from (mostly)
Across the pond
Yes POND.
My poem Pond.
Is it really that poor
This pond poem
That only 29 readers have
Read it so far?
That nobody likes it
That I can cope with
Though I felt
I’d caught something
Both special and good
even (perhaps) worthy
Of a little more attention
Than it got.
Obviously not!
478 · Dec 2012
Wakefield Nativity 4:11
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
Choir**

It’s whom you stand
Next to
That makes it so
Special,
Someone who knows
The next note
And when to sing it.
 
The trick is to let yourself go:
To float on others voices;
To be carried aloft on
A cushion of sound
And joy.
476 · Nov 2012
I think of you
Nigel Morgan Nov 2012
I think of you
When the sky is early blue
As it was this morning

I think of you
With this tenderness
You’ve given me to know

I think of you
In your single bed
Asleep even now

I think of you
Waking to the sound of the sea
To the breakfast voices of children

I think of you
Your quiet body
Folded against my own

I think of you
My front to your back
My heart beating against you

I think of you
Turning over and holding me
In the still warmness of sleep

I think of you
Loving me in your waking
As I love you now in this writing

I think of you
Though far away
So very close
470 · Jan 2013
Let it be
Nigel Morgan Jan 2013
When it comes to you
I can hardly help myself:
this not-thinking,
this avoidance of thought
because sense says so,
and all the rest say no,
let it be,
let it be this way
no matter what.
But, of course, reason
must prevail
and I am left alone
with only a last glimpse of you;
before the door slams,
before the train leaves.
464 · Dec 2012
Wakefield Nativity 8:11
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
Joseph**
 
He’s afraid of her basically.
 
She organises everything,
his food, his clothes
his children, their time together.
 
She wasn’t prepared;
it happened.
She made it work.
 
but . . .
 
She belongs to someone else,
and ponders this mystery
in her heart.
 
He shuts himself
in his workshop.
A good and gentle man.
452 · Dec 2012
Wakefield Nativity 3:11
Nigel Morgan Dec 2012
Elizabeth and Mary*

You wait and wait
for the moment (they say)
you can’t face milk in tea.
Long past caring it happens,
and the inevitability of it all
propels you into discomfort and pain
. . . then this girl you taught last year
smiles at you in the street.
You suddenly know she is *enceinte
,
and so surprised by her passion,
a dream no less: innocence blessed.

— The End —