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Shimmering Sea Sitting at my cluttered desk I’ve just attacked a rabbit with a knife. Don’t fret, it was an Easter gift, a golden bunny bebowed and belled, the chocolate incised and brought to light, rich and dark so keenly comforting aside the coffee beaned from Nepal. Her gift so lovingly given I bless her ever-thoughtfulness, and turn my thoughts to see her walking by the sea, on the cliff path by the shimmering, glimmering sea, always at her right hand, blue, an April blueness barely a footstep from a vertical drop through the light-filled air . . . Heady Scents Fox, she would say, without so much as a sudden sniff, and carry on her way alert to all and everything. And I would wonder, Fox? But I had not been schooled to recognize a creature’s scent, though sensitive always to the human kind: that sweetness after *** found in Cupid’s gym. So the subtle coconut of bright-flowering gorse and garlic woodland-wild when trodden under foot. will have to do instead. Brimstone and Blues Well, the sea is blue today, why not the butterflies too? though seen, it seemed for a second, fluttering at her feet, tumbling indecisively in flickering flight, then gone: to leave a stain of perfect blue upon the retinal cells. Peacocks (not butterflies) I thought it was a peacock’s cry, but it turned to be a turkey out in the orchard next our path to the sea. Such an unpleasant-looking bird whose tatty hind-feathers rose as its blood-red throat trembled with venomous indignation at our presence. Sad creature, so ugly, a troubling form lacking grace or line, majesty or wonder, colour or display of the pave cristasus. Skylarks Larking skywards in the soft spring vertiginous blueness of the daylight heavens, on song with circular breath, seaward and away. We only saw it descend and heard the formants change of its harmoniced voice as it brushed the standing crop, finally fell, and disappeared. Swallows Martins maybe? Surely swifts? But swallows? Not yet awhile. Some similar birds fresh from flight across southern seas appeared, tumbled over, shook the blue air, then disappeared, as suddenly greedy for grubs, insectivously joyful, so glad to be over land once more. Stonechats I take your word for it (having still to finish the birding book you gave at Christmas). Sounds right: the sound of two stones being rubbed together? This robin-sized bird, though dumpy in comparison, who likes to sit on a gorse bush and flick it wings; a nervous habit some might say. Blue on Blue The sea in your eyes is blue on blue dear friend, dear lover of my earthy self whose eyes are browny-green, whilst your’s own cloudless sky, reflect the still shimmering sea. A Ruined Castle In a gap between Purbeck Hills. the Castle of Corfe stands tall yet ruined. Kaikhosru Sorabji once lived in its sight, composer, pianist, recluse. Owning a cottage he called The Eye, with a Steinway Grand and a cat called Jami  - he wrote long complex music people found difficult to play. Eventually forbidding all performances, he died aged 96 - in 1988. A curious man. A Complete Castle This must be an Italianate folly, hardly ruined but complete. We’d stopped for tea, both hot and thirsty. You’d hoped for ice cream but had to wait for another day, another place. Had we not a train to catch, and two miles still to walk, we might have sat on its balcony high above the shimmering sea, and whilst eating ice cream, looked on the sight of Lot’s Wife, that white and final pillar of chalk far out in Alum bay. A Chapel Profoundly square, on a cliff-top high, buttressed to its cardinal points with a single window, with a single door, this chapel stands where St Aldhelm of Malmesbury, would sing his sermons, and, just for fun, some hexametric enigmata (riddles to you and me) From his weaver’s riddle, Lorica: *non sum setigero lanarum uellere facto Nec radiis carpor duro nec pectine pulsor* I am not made from the rasping fleece of wool, no leashes pull [me] nor garrulous threads reverberate . . . A Lighthouse Brilliant white and thoroughly walled about, squat and unmanned, it sits begging for a crashing wave, a serious storm, but not today. The sea is still, calm and gently lapping against the rocks below. A Steam Train At Swanage station just in time, and amply satisfied by our twelve-mile walk, we settled ourselves on bench-like seats in the carriage next the engine as 56XX Tank No.6695 took on water, built up steam for the seven-mile ride past Heston Halt, past Harman’s Cross to Castle Corfe. A circuit made in seven hours by path and rail.
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Apr 23, 2017
Apr 23, 2017 at 5:00 PM UTC
On the South West Coast Path
Shimmering Sea Sitting at my cluttered desk I’ve just attacked a rabbit with a knife. Don’t fret, it was an Easter gift, a golden bunny bebowed and belled, the chocolate incised and brought to light, rich and dark so keenly comforting aside the coffee beaned from Nepal. Her gift so lovingly given I bless her ever-thoughtfulness, and turn my thoughts to see her walking by the sea, on the cliff path by the shimmering, glimmering sea, always at her right hand, blue, an April blueness barely a footstep from a vertical drop through the light-filled air . . . Heady Scents Fox, she would say, without so much as a sudden sniff, and carry on her way alert to all and everything. And I would wonder, Fox? But I had not been schooled to recognize a creature’s scent, though sensitive always to the human kind: that sweetness after *** found in Cupid’s gym. So the subtle coconut of bright-flowering gorse and garlic woodland-wild when trodden under foot. will have to do instead. Brimstone and Blues Well, the sea is blue today, why not the butterflies too? though seen, it seemed for a second, fluttering at her feet, tumbling indecisively in flickering flight, then gone: to leave a stain of perfect blue upon the retinal cells. Peacocks (not butterflies) I thought it was a peacock’s cry, but it turned to be a turkey out in the orchard next our path to the sea. Such an unpleasant-looking bird whose tatty hind-feathers rose as its blood-red throat trembled with venomous indignation at our presence. Sad creature, so ugly, a troubling form lacking grace or line, majesty or wonder, colour or display of the pave cristasus. Skylarks Larking skywards in the soft spring vertiginous blueness of the daylight heavens, on song with circular breath, seaward and away. We only saw it descend and heard the formants change of its harmoniced voice as it brushed the standing crop, finally fell, and disappeared. Swallows Martins maybe? Surely swifts? But swallows? Not yet awhile. Some similar birds fresh from flight across southern seas appeared, tumbled over, shook the blue air, then disappeared, as suddenly greedy for grubs, insectivously joyful, so glad to be over land once more. Stonechats I take your word for it (having still to finish the birding book you gave at Christmas). Sounds right: the sound of two stones being rubbed together? This robin-sized bird, though dumpy in comparison, who likes to sit on a gorse bush and flick it wings; a nervous habit some might say. Blue on Blue The sea in your eyes is blue on blue dear friend, dear lover of my earthy self whose eyes are browny-green, whilst your’s own cloudless sky, reflect the still shimmering sea. A Ruined Castle In a gap between Purbeck Hills. the Castle of Corfe stands tall yet ruined. Kaikhosru Sorabji once lived in its sight, composer, pianist, recluse. Owning a cottage he called The Eye, with a Steinway Grand and a cat called Jami  - he wrote long complex music people found difficult to play. Eventually forbidding all performances, he died aged 96 - in 1988. A curious man. A Complete Castle This must be an Italianate folly, hardly ruined but complete. We’d stopped for tea, both hot and thirsty. You’d hoped for ice cream but had to wait for another day, another place. Had we not a train to catch, and two miles still to walk, we might have sat on its balcony high above the shimmering sea, and whilst eating ice cream, looked on the sight of Lot’s Wife, that white and final pillar of chalk far out in Alum bay. A Chapel Profoundly square, on a cliff-top high, buttressed to its cardinal points with a single window, with a single door, this chapel stands where St Aldhelm of Malmesbury, would sing his sermons, and, just for fun, some hexametric enigmata (riddles to you and me) From his weaver’s riddle, Lorica: *non sum setigero lanarum uellere facto Nec radiis carpor duro nec pectine pulsor* I am not made from the rasping fleece of wool, no leashes pull [me] nor garrulous threads reverberate . . . A Lighthouse Brilliant white and thoroughly walled about, squat and unmanned, it sits begging for a crashing wave, a serious storm, but not today. The sea is still, calm and gently lapping against the rocks below. A Steam Train At Swanage station just in time, and amply satisfied by our twelve-mile walk, we settled ourselves on bench-like seats in the carriage next the engine as 56XX Tank No.6695 took on water, built up steam for the seven-mile ride past Heston Halt, past Harman’s Cross to Castle Corfe. A circuit made in seven hours by path and rail.
A day's walk from on the Corfe Castle ro Swanage and back via the heritage steam railway.Poem titles by Alice Fox.
nigel-morgan
Written by
Apr 23, 2017
Apr 23, 2017 at 5:00 PM UTC
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