Tuesday, 23 June 2020
The Longest Day.
Even the longest day must end eventually,
Become a faded postcard stored in a cupboard,
A postcard fainter than my thumb print
Smudged upon a dirty window pane.
The longest day, important to me now,
Will lose the gloss and colour, fierce intensity
Of mid summer glory, this sensuous moment,
To become much less incisive than a dream.
Those things I find so special on this day,
The two new roses budding on the dead stick
That I thrust, with not much hope, into the ground,
A year or more ago, will soon be history -
Faint shadows of a summer garden where
I can no longer dig or rake or hoe.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
June 21st. - 23rd. 2020.
Friday, 19 June 2020
The Mouse Transformed into a Girl. (Revised).
Falling through space is not remembered;
Trees and church towers rushing upwards;
Gulls squabbling in mid flight.
The surge of air sucking the breath
Out of lungs the size of thumb nails
As earth smiles welcome, a faithless friend,
A fraud disguising dark intentions
With arms wide open - wide as oceans,
But harder than a granite block.
Shock waves of love surge through her body,
The cupped hands of the wise magician
Now catching her - as though a blossom,
Not prey dropped from a Gannet`s beak. -
Wrapped up into a warm embrace
Love seems to change her in an instant
From back street mouse to well heeled hostess,
From lost cause to contented woman
Snug happy in her rescuers bed.
"I am glad you stayed", the magician whispered,
"And did not revert to your underworld ways".
But today she has knelt for hours by the wainscot
As though searching for a friendly face.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
19th. - 20th.June 2020.
My response to the watercolour illustration of this fable by Gustave Moreau. This is a companion piece to my poem The Cat Transformed into a Woman.
Wednesday, 17 June 2020
Trevor J Potter's Art: The Cat Transformed into a Woman. (Revised).
Trevor J Potter's Art: The Cat Transformed into a Woman. (Revised).: She retained some of her feline nature. The lack of fur perplexed her, So she grew her hair down to her slender heels. "A little ho...
October Morning. (Revised).
I thought about you all day - today,
The sun white on your morning face
As you lay - imperious - in my tumbled bed,
Your shirt wide open to your navel,
Your smile - a crescent moon - of grace.
I studied your eyes, heavy with shadow,
Your eyes, once sad, fierce with the laughter
Of a woman who has won against all odds.
"You fought like a tigress", I whispered archly,
But I was never going to let you lose.
Is it seven long years since we hugged in the doorway?
Seven long years of phone calls and emails?
I have thought about you every day - since then.
It seems you have completely taken over my mind.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
15th. - 16th. - 17th. June 2020.
Sunday, 14 June 2020
The Cat Transformed into a Woman. (Revised).
She retained some of her feline nature.
The lack of fur perplexed her,
So she grew her hair down to her slender heels.
"A little house on her head", she called it,
A little house that was dangerous in high winds.
Cutting nales always proved an awkward problem,
She was used to claws that rarely grew too long
And were easy to manicure on posts and doors.
Human nales, it seems, were a very different matter,
They cracked and snapped, and sometimes curled sharp
beneath her toes.
Even mice ran rings around her when she stalked them;
A cat on hands and knees is so easy to escape.
At a glance she seemed entirely, naturally, human,
Especially when snug tight on her lovers lap,
A sandwich in one hand, a whiskey in the other,
A Gold Sobranie lit between her lips.
But some nights she would sit close up to the window
And cry sad secrets to the waning moon.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
14th. - 17th. June 2020.
My response to the watercolour illustration by Gustave Moreau.
Saturday, 13 June 2020
Trevor J Potter's Art: My Ideal Funeral.
Trevor J Potter's Art: My Ideal Funeral. (Revised).: 1 . An Early Encounter. When I die Let there be No curtained Hearse To carry me Along the Hampstead High Street ...
Friday, 12 June 2020
The Open Door. (Recitative and Aria).
Recitative.
I left the door open by mistake.
No thieves came,
No trespasser entered,
But the whole house was filled
With an unexpected light,
And birdsong thrilled the air.
I was waiting for the telephone to ring.
Good news spoken down the line
Could not outshine this singular moment,
Could not have similar power.
I improvised a melody in my head,
But the moment I added words the music faltered.
I was wondering how you were in the hospital,
An oxygen mask clamped over your face,
Brusque nurses whispering into the dark
And mysterious byways of your sleeping mind.
The phone only rings when the doctors find the time
To deal with - what for them - are peripheral matters.
But such hurried words confute truth with complexities,
Replace a longed for hug with rhetoric,
A kiss with bland statistics,
A smile with dull advice.
The sunlight dancing down the hall
Brings brighter gifts of hope.
Aria.
If I could hide ten Nightingales in my coat
I would deftly smuggle them into your ward
Then let them loose to fly over your bed,
Cascading music deep into your night.
But if this does not shake you from your sleep,
I will ask the thieves to saunter through the door,
Take what they need from off the shelves and table,
Leaving me an epitaph to write.
But rest assured I am no defeatist yet,
The morning sun was the fire of the Paraclete,
Not the precursor to an afternoon of rain.
The sun still burns my face at six o clock.
And the front door now stays open every day,
Until I hear your laughter in the hall.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
June 2nd. 2020.
A development of the unfinished poem Whit Sunday written May 22nd. - July 3rd. 2017.
The poet is writing this poem to a person lost in dreams from his own dream world.
I left the door open by mistake.
No thieves came,
No trespasser entered,
But the whole house was filled
With an unexpected light,
And birdsong thrilled the air.
I was waiting for the telephone to ring.
Good news spoken down the line
Could not outshine this singular moment,
Could not have similar power.
I improvised a melody in my head,
But the moment I added words the music faltered.
I was wondering how you were in the hospital,
An oxygen mask clamped over your face,
Brusque nurses whispering into the dark
And mysterious byways of your sleeping mind.
The phone only rings when the doctors find the time
To deal with - what for them - are peripheral matters.
But such hurried words confute truth with complexities,
Replace a longed for hug with rhetoric,
A kiss with bland statistics,
A smile with dull advice.
The sunlight dancing down the hall
Brings brighter gifts of hope.
Aria.
If I could hide ten Nightingales in my coat
I would deftly smuggle them into your ward
Then let them loose to fly over your bed,
Cascading music deep into your night.
But if this does not shake you from your sleep,
I will ask the thieves to saunter through the door,
Take what they need from off the shelves and table,
Leaving me an epitaph to write.
But rest assured I am no defeatist yet,
The morning sun was the fire of the Paraclete,
Not the precursor to an afternoon of rain.
The sun still burns my face at six o clock.
And the front door now stays open every day,
Until I hear your laughter in the hall.
Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
June 2nd. 2020.
A development of the unfinished poem Whit Sunday written May 22nd. - July 3rd. 2017.
The poet is writing this poem to a person lost in dreams from his own dream world.
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