Tag Archives: rhyming poetry

Not Quite Adlestrop

Sitting on the platform,

Waiting for my train to stop,

I thought of Adlestrop.

 

 

I yawned.

Someone lit a cigarette.

Noone complained

And no authority figure came.

 

 

I hated that cigarette

And prayed for a train.

Yes I remember Adlestrop

And the poet’s name.

 

 

The above poem came to me as I sat at Gipsy Hill railway station in south-east London. I doubt the gentleman who shared his cigarette with those on the platform (including me), has heard of Edward Thomas. I suspect he has no care for poetry. He certainly had no consideration for his fellow commuters.

Rainbow

On a late March day

The spring hides away.

The sun may come

Interspersed with cold rain.

 

 

Perhaps I should go

In search of a rainbow

For I am told

That rainbows lead to gold.

 

 

I doubt tis so

But a rainbow

In a poor poet’s heart

Is surely art

And worth more than gold.

Threatened with Chains

When a young lady brandishing whips and chains

Said, “do you like a girl with brains?”,

I said, “dear Lou,

I most certainly do!

But please can you stop brandishing those chains!”

Fragility

I heard children at play

On a spring day.

Their voices full of pleasure

In sunny weather.

The ice cream van came,

Then the wild wind

And the rain

Came and shook the glass

In my window frames

And reminded me

Of man’s fragility.

Spinster

“A Century of Nature Stories”, left on a ledge

In a bare room.

Did perfume

Once linger here?

 

A spinster lived and died

In this place

We made our home

For a little while.

 

“A Century of Nature Stories”,

What did that mean to you?

An old tome

Left in your former home?

 

I recall horses on the wall

Of my bedroom.

I think you would have approved

But I will never know

For you died long ago.

 

I regret we never met.

The memory of that book has stuck with me

And I would like to ask you

What it meant to you.

 

You came from a different age.

I imagine you would have engaged

With books

And the garden with the Crab Apple Tree.

What would you have thought of this age

Obsessed with technology, where quiet

Is so often replaced by formless riot, of people

Who have lost

What they can not regain,

And I can not explain.

 

You where anchored in your home and time.

I have a rhyme

Of a lady I never knew

And thoughts of what may be true.

Or at least half true.

Swinging

When I went to a swingers bar

With a girl who calls herself Marr

A police constable named Flair

Danced nude on a chair –

But you should have seen Miss Marr …!

Poet Kevin Morris’s Poem “I Am Tired” on Dodo Modern Poets

I am pleased to let you know that my poem “I am Tired” has been included in the latest episode of Dodo Modern Poets. To listen to “I am Tired” and the other poet’s work, please visit https://dodomodernvidpoets2022.blogspot.com/.

 

I listened using Google Chrome. (For some reason none of the poems would play for me using  Microsoft’s Edge browser. If you do get Edge to work for you, please do let me know)!

 

 

 

Melancholy Polly

There was a young lady named Polly

Who was known for her love of melancholy.

Her verse was so sad

It drove us all mad

So we exiled that girl to a folly

Slippers and Kippers

There once was a young lady in slippers

Who was famous for her custard and kippers.

Her food was real nice

But that girl’s only vice

Was serving kippers whilst dressed in just slippers …!

Hatch Who Was Fond of a Scratch

There once was a writer named Hatch

Who was fond of having a scratch.

He liked to write

With his dog White

Whose fleas  would cause Hatch to scratch!