Sunday, 24 April 2016

The 'How well do you know someone?' poem

I like to write poems about imagined relationships, I suppose I recognise now that it's from the storytelling side of my character. This one, as I recall, came from a writing challenge set in the Dunbar Writers group. It was written in 2004, and published in Sushi & Chips (Diehard 2006).


Foundations

In an untended day
she looks for dust in his bookcase,
finds a shelf of sci-fi long past its read-by.

Idly, an old Asimov reveals
a scrawly bookmark, a letter
in a hand she does not own.

She hesitates; doubts and rights
and wrongs conflict, and are not
resolved, but fingers stretch,

and sweaty curious hands
unfold and smooth
the wrinkled paper.

Some words are blurred
and waterworn, but darling,
desperate and love are clear.

Downstairs his dog barks
at her row of flying ducks
where he wanted nuns –

his brother has them -  worse -
gnomes who moon all night
in his concrete garden.

Derek might have a desperate darling
but not her John, whose vows
she thought a deep and unacknowledged

sacrament, a layer of himself
rigid as limestone, a core value.
But now she has a key

without a lock, without a door,
an unsuspected room
in a house she thought she knew.

She folds the letter, puts it back,
leaves the cobwebs hanging
and the window unwashed.



Copyright  © Colin Will, 2006, 2016



Sunday, 3 April 2016

The acting poem

This one's about acting in On Golden Pond, the first time I did it. I was actually in two productions, separated by several years, and in different drama groups, but playing the same part - Charlie the Maine mailman. I suppose I'm thinking a lot about my acting days lately, because I'm writing a series of short stories based on my career in amdram, from 1982 to 2002, as actor, director, lighting designer and general backstage helper. I loved it. Being backstage in a theatre is one of the most magical experience I know, and I never got over the thrill of it. 

This was first published in my second book - Seven Senses - published by Diehard and now available from Amazon, slightly modified, in a Kindle edition (ASIN B005FG1IU0).


The mailman cometh
(After Ernest Thompson’s On Golden Pond)

I’m listening to Copland’s Appalachian Spring
for the hundredth time or more.
It’s a fine piece on its own
but for me it also tugs back curtains
on backstage nerves and certainty.

The opening, quiet and slow,
dignity in the backwoods,
and then a jaggy dance
before the bassoon’s pipe-and-slippered serenity.

At the side of the song,
on the corners of hearing,
there’s a stringed tension
under the oboe’s yearning
and that’s a part of why I am.

That was when, each night,
the curtain opened and the play began.
I watched from the wings, never bored, breathing,
as every night the old couple entered their Maine
and groused through their first scene,
until my goofied entrance.

Their daughter was my first boy-dream,
and my only hopeless adult adulation.
When she came back with her own routemap
I knew there could have been love -I felt it -
but the freeway world’s dissatisfactions
bypassed my hick laughter;
my forest-nurtured wishing.

You could never be everyone’s everything -
the son your father wanted -
the home-wife for me -
the fiery, assenting lover for yourself.

And yet, as we played our roles,
you torn, and hating, but only self-hurting;
me the audience’s comic relief,
we really lived our paper lives
and the words became flesh,
knowing less than love,
needing more than music.


Copyright © Colin Will, 1996, 2000, 2016

Saturday, 5 March 2016

More geology

Another excerpt from Mementoliths, first printed in 2005, this one from the Kindle edition, Mementoloiths2, available from Amazon. Again, there's a description of the rock, followed by a poem which I associated with it. The association here is with the ancient nature of the rock, and with James Hutton, the man who first realised the enormity of geological time - 'no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end.'

Granulite, Scourie

This rock is granular in texture (hence the name), grey in colour, made from mixed black and white grains. This is the oldest rock in Scotland – 2.9 Ga old, and that’s a major part of the age of the planet. One man who appreciated the enormous scale of geological time was James Hutton, author of The Theory of the Earth (1795). He wrote of finding in the cyclical processes of the Earth “no vestige of a beginning and no prospect of an end”. It’s very tempting to suggest that some of Robert Burns’ lines in ‘My luv is like a red, red rose’ owe a debt to Hutton, and to his friend Sir James Hall, of Dunglass – Burns certainly met them both in Edinburgh. Earlier, Hutton had farmed at Slighhouses in the Berwickshire hinterland, where he wrote an enormous unpublished manuscript on agriculture, preserved in the National Library of Scotland.

The Elements of Agriculture


It’s cool here on Monynut Edge,
strafed by the wind,
grubbing for enlightenment
among the scabby half-chewed neeps
and scunnered sheep.

Another page done - two candles-worth -
yet more scrawled remembrances
and admonitions
on the improvement of pasture,
the winterage of beasts
and the beneficiation of soils.
This book will treasure me
in times to come, enough
to forego farming
and fund my hammering
in the hame hills, and furth,
through the echoing halls
of uncountable time,
and the rocks of eternity.



Copyright  @ Colin Will 2005, 2016


Saturday, 13 February 2016

The Valentine

Over the years I've written several Valentine poems for Jane, but not for some time. Now, with our 50th anniversary coming up in April (which we'll be celebrating privately, just the two of us, as in the beginning) I felt the urge to write a new one.



For Jane, 2016

It’s coming up to our 50th,
but of course our love began
before that. I’d be lying
if I said I can’t remember us
back then. I definitely can,
it’s just that memories get buried
with the weight of life on top.

Sometimes it needs a jog,
a jolt, an image, for me to begin
to unravel the years, the experiences,
especially in the early times.
But one thing I do recall
with absolute clarity.
At the start of us, a friend asked,
‘How long will it last?’ 
I said, ‘The rest of my life.’ 
That was, and still is, true.


Copyright © Colin Will 2016


Thursday, 4 February 2016

Stones again


Another poem from Mementoliths (2005). This time I'm including the full description of the rock, as I think it's quite poetic, even with all the geological terms. It's the kind of stone you'd pick up on a beach, walking with a loved one, talking about this and that. The paleness of it, it's chunky crystals, a lucky stone, a talking point, the kind of stone you'd either keep or drop, but you would never throw it into the anonymity of the sea.


Pegmatite, South Harris

A pale rock, composed of large angular crystals of near-pink plagioclase feldspar in a matrix of interlocked quartz - sugar-grained, and translucent, milky, like candle-drips – with black patches of shiny biotite in foliated groups, the minerals aligned as if bedded, frozen in the moment of crystallising. It was formed deep in the crust, when a mass of granitic composition cooled very very slowly, at a temperature close to its melting point, so the crystals had time to grow really large. I picked this piece up on the shore at Horgabost, Harris, just along the road from Luskentyre – one of Norman MacCaig’s favourite places (and no wonder). Harris is all roundness, everything smoothed by the weather of aeons. These islands are as much water as solid ground, and where the lochs hold islands, each has a water-hollow in its heart, with a wet rock in the middle – an infinite regression of water and stone.




Tryst

We sit together on a bank of yielding pebbles
looking out on a sea an even blue.

We discuss our latest local difficulties,
the stuttering points where our boats have grounded,

the reefs of indecision and the myriad channels
of possibility, the stumps of old wrecks

from our separate histories, the courses we might set
in convoy or as independent voyagers.

At some stage an unvoiced agreement is reached.
Sinews are stretched as we stand, stones shift

and scooped prints near the wave’s edge mark our ways
on the wet beach, and the incremental progress of tides


Colin Will
Copyright (c) 2003, 2005

Sunday, 10 January 2016

More geology

Back in 2005 I published Mementoliths, a wee pamphlet where each poem was introduced by a short piece of writing on a geological or mineral topic related to the poem. 

This one was inspired by a trip with a friend to a quarry near Middleton, Midlothian. She thought it was a quarry she'd visited as a child with her late father. She described it to me, and I thought it sounded wonderful, but I couldn't place it. So we went to Middleton, and it wasn't like that at all. It was...



The Wrong Quarry

Blue flakes litter the grey sky bowl.
We pick our careful way
between squelch and slide,
totter and bog-soak.
A steady breeze removes
the heat of walking
from spoil-heap to cart-track.
We reach the carved cliff
and peck among sharpened talus,
seeking the pearly glyphs
of prehistory among industrial shards.
A mud burrow in the sandy stone
reveals a creature's traces
like the curling whiff of smoking cordite
from a dropped gun
beside an absent victim.

It's all about the tectonics of memory
shuffling continental fragments;
how a wedge of childhood
docks against the hard foreland
of an adult's dreams. Yet though

pink spikes of orchids drift
through the purple tufts of thistles
the way they always did,
the rocks have moved away,
buried or eroded. Time subducts
experience, when no-one checks
in the missing years. What's left
is mystery, uncertainty, the lost clues
to map our Polar Wandering Curve
and reunite a personal Gondwana.


Copyright  © Colin Will 2005




Tuesday, 22 December 2015

The solstice poem

Posting today for the winter solstice, this poem took its inspiration from William Dunbar, that marvellous Makar, who may or may not have taken his surname from the town where I now live. It's known his family had land in the area. At any rate, I like to think there's a connection. This is a dark poem, and I make no apology for that. Sometimes it really is dark.

This poem was written in 2009 and first published in The floorshow at the Mad Yak Café (Red Squirrel Press, 2010).


The Low Point
(after ‘A Meditatioun in Wyntir’, by William Dunbar, c 1460- c 1520)

“Dirk and drublie days” right enough,
but the heavens are not always sable –
some days there are true skies, and a wind
shifted from Siberia, to seek unfurnished skin.

Today the longer dark hours are filled
with entertainments then curtailed. It’s hard
to imagine what true darkness meant
for plays, poems, music – summer pursuits all.

Scratching by candle, each scrivener wrought
on quires of deckled paper, by goosequill and gallol,
words of wisdom, terms of love and learning,
some meters of beauty to catch future’s eye.

Warring motives lay on from every side.
Despair’s the easy one now, so much bad news
in these cold times, suggest the one
begets the other. Patience dismissed,

and fortune damned – predestiny leaves no room
for innocent actions. We may as well be doomed
as blessed, and with an equal chance. Causality
is on a winter break, along with warmth and light.

Slyly, with some pretence of favour, chilly whispers
question why I carry forward a life that soon
I’ll leave behind, with loves and friendships
broken links, unconnected leads and empty ears.

The forgetfulness of age is a brotherly service,
for remembrance of ourselves in youth
would give us pain – the way we were,
the things we did, the chances missed.

And death to come is final leveller;
low or high, we similarly stoop to enter
the same one-way system, a singularity,
the dimming doorway to a hall of nothing.

But yet, four minutes today, five tomorrow,
the nights imperceptibly shorten, and at some point
I’ll know times have changed, that summer pleasures
lie ahead, and will return. The ball rolls round.


Copyright  © Colin Will, 2009, 2010