Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Moles



Under garden and field, through humus and loam, moles tunnel
earth miners nose-diving through truffle brown
snaffling and snouting the ground in swims through soil
carving subterranean highways with shovel feet.

Nosing up towards brilliantine stars they are too blind to see
their neat little heaps punctuate green with soft sifted earth
flagrantly ignoring our boundaries, true ramblers knowing
that under turf all earth is free, moles criss-cross our land
nudging up little piles of disregard.

To be a mole-catcher was once deemed a profession
most worthy, hunting these Jersey ploughmen
with their digger feet and squiffy eyes and velveteen sheen
and even a cream-white breed in some parishes. *

Perhaps the mole-catcher would once have worn a waistcoat
made of their neat little skins, as he followed moles crossways
via their uncharted paths, knowing leaving a few to survive
would protect his trade, becoming wise in their ways.

And perhaps it is true that on moonlit nights
after a pint or two, my father went out to dig a few mounds
to augment their few, and when postcards came
warning the moles had returned, perhaps he regretted
the traps and the poison-blue worms he slipped
into their caves

for he knew that one day he too would be
in l’rouoyaume des taupes, the kingdom of moles **
berthed deep in the berried leafy clod
pressed tight with fusty soil muffling his ears
not hearing their digger feet scratching the ground
nuzzling close, tunnelling free.



a cream-white form occurred sparingly in several parts of Jersey chiefly in St Lawrence and St Martin...  Frances Le Sueur, A Natural History of Jersey, 1976.

** dans l’rouoyaume des taupes (in the kingdom of moles) is a Jèrriais euphemism for being dead.

This poem was a runner up in the Mslexia Women's Poetry Competition 2013.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Jersey Airlines

Jersey Airlines hasn't existed since the sixties, but I like that it still has a ghostly presence at Jersey Airport...


Monday, May 14, 2012

Memento mori

'Every artwork that has ever interested me is about death...'

'Because we're dealing with death which is so negative, it has to be totally positive...'

                                    Damien Hirst        
  

You have to love Tate Modern for exhibiting Damien Hirst's £50 million platinum and diamond skull For the Love of God free to the public, while the rest of his exhibition carries an entry charge.



I'm sorry Damien, but yes it is slightly tacky - the way the lights make it sparkle prismatically like cheap costume jewellery.

But there is something delicate and touching as well about how the stones pick out the shape of  the skull, making you want to touch it.

It is beautiful and macabre.  And the redeeming feature (apart from that laughing grimace) is that it makes you think about the unknown eighteenth century male on whom it is modelled, only whose teeth remain, slightly discoloured but in pretty good condition.  And makes you think about your own mortality....

Perhaps the moral is that, even after death, you never know what might happen to you; fame might still come your way...

Which, I suppose, is also true of David Shrigley's dog exhibit ( recently shown as part of Brain Activity at the Hayward Gallery):




Sunday, May 13, 2012

London - green spaces

A London weekend of cemeteries, parks, outdoor theatre and heathland walks...


Brompton Cemetery
Brompton Cemetery
Brompton Cemetery
Brompton Cemetery
Waterloo Millennium Green
St George's Gardens
Hampstead Heath
Caledonian Park - Babel - angel
Caledonian Park - Babel
Caledonian Park - Babel
Caledonian Park - Babel
Caledonian Park - Babel
Caledonian Park - Babel
Caledonian Park - Babel

London - poets' homes

A Sunday walk to visit some famous homes of the poets.

Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath:

18 Rugby Street


'So there in Number Eighteen Rugby Street's
Victorian torpor and squalor I waited for you.
I think of that house as a stage-set -
Four floors exposed to the auditorium.
On all four floors, in, out, the love struggle
In all its acts and scenes...'

18 Rugby Street, Ted Hughes.


3 Chalcot Square



23 Fitzroy Road

Keats House:

Wentworth Place, Hampstead