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Speccie Competition Darker Side of Spring
Our four top chaps are all there. Bill gets the fiver. Hets ij the air.The rest of us can all go home.
In Competition 2839 you were invited to submit a poem about the darker side of spring. There were references in the entry to Larkin, who could always be relied on to see the bleaker side of things (‘their greenness is a kind of grief’), as well as to Eliot and Thomas Edward Brown. There were also nice echoes of Ogden Nash and Wordsworth. Nicholas Holbrook and Josephine Boyle were unlucky losers and I liked Ray Kelley’s closing couplet: ‘It’s not by mere coincidence that vernal/ Rhymes so immaculately with infernal.’ The winners, printed below, earn £25 each. Bill Greenwell takes the extra fiver. At night the young man’s fancy burns With unrequited lust; His thighs expand, his stomach churns, He shudders with disgust — He hates himself, he hates the scent Of buds, the songs of birds. With winter gone, his fast intent’s Too terrible for words. In spring, incomprehensible, He springs up like a weed, With thoughts beyond defensible And desperate to breed. Every Jill and daffodil Should tremble at his tread: For he is driven by his will To trample on their bed. Bill Greenwell The distinguished author of ‘The Waste Land’ and ‘Little Gidding’ Called April cruel. He wasn’t kidding. But it’s not only April that makes me feel like joining the berserkers. It’s the whole damn vernal circus, When normally sane adults behave like Basil Fotherington-Thomas As if the world becomes full of promise At the very first sighting of a snowdrop or a crocus, And similar hocus-pocus. You’ll hear people chorus ‘Ah, the sap is rising!’ Like it’s a miracle. That’s what sap does. Is that surprising? Here’s what I believe: Like vows of love spring flatters to deceive, A layer of pastoral optimism Over the abysm. So don’t ask me to celebrate Primavera. I’d rather poison pigeons in the park, like Tom Lehrer. Basil Ransome-Davies The robin seeks a worm to kill. The cat lusts for the robin’s blood. Cruel hunters shake off winter’s chill. Death blooms beside the crocus bud. The shriek of birds, the whine of flies, The burn and itch of pollen spores Assail our ears and sting our eyes. Our noses ooze like leprous sores. Wrapped in cold-weather anoraks, We bulged and sagged in privacy. Now all our pints and all our snacks Are all too plain for all to see. Still worse, this season brings us Lent, Time to abstain from everything. We suffer winter’s punishment, And then do penance in the spring. Chris O’Carroll With useless hope you hurt our hearts; The perfume on your breath Comes not from joyous, princely courts But from the land of death. With songs you tease our tired lips Too sad with age to sing. With mirthful wine you fill our cups, Cruel and deceitful Spring! Give foolish boys and wide-eyed girls Your rainbow-rich displays. Let birds repeat your wicked carols And please you with their praise. But we who’ve seen your floral shows Who once with joy believed We could abandon winter clothes Now view you, undeceived. Frank McDonald Spring cleaning must be done, a cloud of dust Hangs mid-air in a beam of April sun, And on the window sill a mildew crust Reveals that putrefaction has begun. The house, neglected through the storms and squalls That threatened roof and chimneys shows the signs Of slow insidious damage, crumbling walls Behind the cobwebbed paper, inky lines Where curtains fold. I reach out for the broom, For mops and dusters to begin my task, Unpeeling winter’s grime from every room, But as I sweep and scrub I have to ask If dirt can ever be in my control, And if hard work can ever purge the soul. Katie Mallett It’s Spring, and the weeds are encroaching, But other plants, too, are a pest. They come out of nowhere, determined to grow where We’ve planted the rarest and best. Now, where did those violets come from? I’d never have have planted them there. They’re pretty enough, but invasive and rough, And they’re seeding themselves everywhere. Campanulas, too, are a nightmare; We planted a small group of three. First a pool, then a river — and now, with a shiver, I stare at a limitless sea. These marauders, these trespassing beauties, Have become an unstoppable bevy. Though the days may grow light, it’s a sobering sight, And my heart, I assure you, is heavy. Brian Allgar |
Congratulations all. There are some very clever poems there. I gave up the struggle quite early on, so no gritted teeth at not winning!
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Cheers for you chaps! And for Katie Mallett too.
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As Sylvia said, the entries are very clever.
Congratulations to our superstars -- and double for Brian, with an HM for NH as well! Jayne |
Nice going, guys!
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I couldn't possibly say that. But I'm glad you did, Brian.
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I rather like this phrase you've coined... |
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