The sayings of Dora, my great nan, widow of a #Seaforthhighlander #wewillrememberthem wonder if any of these come from the trenches #WW1

Amber Valley-20131110-01766

This a quick post, as I need to get ready for the Remembrance Day parade in Codnor, where we remember the first soldier in the village to die in WW1. You can find out more about the soldiers that died in Codnor in WW1 on codnor.info.

When I was having a difficult time, my grandma came out with these sayings a few times and I recorded them, so I thought I would share. They might have come from the trenches.

Life’s tough if you don’t weaken.

You never know your luck before you’re shot at.

Don’t worry. It will be dark by 6.

The photo shows All Saints Church Sunday 10.11.13 in Ripley, Derbyshire taken as part of my @RipleyReckoning project. (c) Rebecca Deans

 

Posted in Derbyshire Ripley, Remembrance Sunday, Seaforthhighlanders, trenches, WeWillRememberThem, WW1 | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Another found poem – from 2003 – The Allotment #poetry #amwriting #olderpeople

I have just found this on my computer and I like it. I’m not terribly confident with my poetry, but I like elements of it.

The Allotment

It reeks of weed killer and tweed.

There is no shed, and yet

It is a sanctuary of flat caps, flasks

And giving up. A get together of sensible

Opinions and even more sensible shoes.

Here, we trade tips on growing straighter

Cucumbers, shame at our carrots’ protuberances.

We like our beans to be long, our potatoes spotless.

We pride the size of our marrows.

We attract the butterflies. The cabbage

Whites dicing with the breeze. It’s a hub

Of pollination. And yet it’s a secret garden

When we’re here, we’re invisible to the naked eye.

The wrong sort of insect gets

Attacked by diluted washing up liquid.

It’s our only use for it – our dears in slippers

Housecoats and curlers normally see to that.

We put out beer for slugs to slug and die.

Our real gardens at home have

Acres of green grass, water features, and

Greenhouses tucked away behind garages. We

Confine the places where we shit into ditches to grow beans

To a council plot.

But when we die, we ask for a spray of carrots,

A wreath of cauliflowers for our final digging.

A harvest festival of remembrance.

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Exposé – the title track from my first novella – published 1998 in the UEA texts series

  1. Exposé

Looking at the aged couple bickering in the corner of my Metro carriage, I doubt this is the City of Love.  I don’t quite understand what they are saying, but the words “Dans le café encore une fois?” and “J’ai besoin de mes boules” keep cropping up.  The woman’s face is as harsh as a citron pressé without the sugar, the man’s as soft as a beignet, but his eyes bead like raisins.

The train screeches round a corner and the lights go off for a moment.  I start to make up their story.   The man has another woman whom he meets every Friday night to go to the “Formula One” hotel, while his wife sits around reading Harlequins and feeling guilty for watching the “boys band”.  Old enough to be their grandma.

I am desperate for things to write about, I’ve been in Paris for three weeks and I haven’t even planned my first novel.  And two days after my one-off conquest I am about to face my biggest

challenge: giving a talk based on my dissertation to a class of Maitrisse students.

I fight my way out of the Metro.  Outside the light is clean and white, the building are tall and slightly run-down.  People mill around calmly, detached from the bustle below.  This is the

Marais, the oldest part of Paris. It was the marsh, and these are mainly tourists admiring the old hotels, not a care in the world, except for doing Montparnasse by five o’clock and still getting to see the Eiffel Tower.  I get stuck behind Americans playing spot the old building, and I have only five minutes to get to the university.

I enter the university and am immediately confronted with the coolness of these people – there seems to be more cigarettes in the hall than people – and more smoke rings than that.  I open

a big red door with no name on it and sit down at the back of the classroom, trying to remember the underwear thing, then laughing out loud, because their underwear is bound to be so much better than my Marks and Sparks three for a fiver big knickers.

I am addressing the class of a certain Mme Martin, a friend of a professor at home. Eleven elegant Isabelle Adjani lookalikes stride past and sit down, after flicking their various black hair whichever way it isn’t meant to go, and then, a cute two seconds later, back again.  The most perfect of them all, all glamour and maturity glides in to greet her girls.  Mme Martin’s smile is as perfect as a disinfected bathroom.

They talk for several minutes about trips to England in stilted English. They haven’t noticed me, I feel proud that I’ve blended in so well.  It must be my new Parisian image.  Anything as long as it is black.  Except for the cardigan my Grandma knitted me for Christmas, though even that can look swish with bootleg trousers.  I cough to get their attention.

Twelve eyes glare.

“Hello class, let me present to you, Aleece Smeets.  She is visiting Paris on an exchange, but her professeur Mr. Fortescue-Smyth asked her to give her a talk on her memoir.”

I take it as a cue, and am pleased by the welcoming smiles on the French girl’s faces.  “I understand that you are currently studying the works of James Kelman.”

Blank looks for five seconds, then one girl, who looks as if she sleeps in Kookai, says,  “Yes we are studying zee decline of zee modern Briteesh Fiction.”

“Decline? OK.  Well I’m here to present a paper on the renaissance of British fiction, but I suppose that it’s the furry side of the shellsuit.  I will start with a potted history of Post-War England…”  A few blank looks, but I get on with it, presenting my run down on angry young men, angry young women until….

“Where are you from?”

“I’m taking a postmodernist perspective, I’m focusing on Booker Prize winners, I’m writing in favour of…”

“But what part of England do you come from?”

This isn’t in the script.  “I’m from,” I say frum, “Derbyshire.  But…”  Is it important?

“Derbyshire, is not that near Kent?” says the Kookai girl.

Nods of approval spread through the class, including strangely enough Mme Martin.

I think I’d better correct them, even if it isn’t relevant to my dissertation.  “Well actually it’s in the North Midlands.  In the North.”

“Oh, yes near to Manchester, I went there once.  Yes your Cream is very good.”

Cream?  That’s in Liverpool. I decide to go with the Manchester comment.

“Well it’s a bit south of there: nearer to Nottingham.”

“You are Robin Hood?

Madame Martin addresses her girls. “Well, class, don’t we think that it is very interesting to hear the accent of the North.”

“Midlands,” I say, sheepishly.

“Yes, we are very interested in the accents, though we find it difficult to understand, is it not?”

A girl with girder cheekbones chips in.  “We are creating an archive of rural customs, perhaps you could come to the culture lesson and we could record you, no?”

“Well my accent isn’t actually that strong to be perfectly honest.”

“I’m sorry could you say that again?”

I repeat last couple of lines for her then continue with a history of Thatcherism and the miners, Morris and the Minors. Even a little bit about Europe, but it didn’t figure very much in the books I read.  I notice a few nods in the audience, though that is perhaps because someone had their music on in their car outside.

“I am very sorry. Could you perhaps repeat that again?”

I’m quoting from James Kelman so I quite enjoy that.  “‘Fuck it.  He shook his head and glanced up the way…'”

Mme Martin stops me again.  “I’m sorry…”

“‘… people – there were people there; eyes looking.  These eyes looking…'” It was a point about the all-pervading media, about Big Brother, about close circuit television.  I trip up, almost phlegm on the table.  Twelve disapproving looks, twelve flicks of the head.  And I can swear one of the girls is singing now, “you say silver, I choose gold…”

I try to regularise each guttural “u”, each drawling sound, straining to change my voice. Mme Martin stares hard at the wall as if it is trying to kill her.  She is transfixed.

Then she speaks.  “Derbysheere, you say?”

Well actually we say Derbyshire, but I’ll let you off. “Derbysheere, that is where there is beautiful scenery, and you have well dressings, no?”

“Yes, in the spring and summertime, all colourful and made of flower petals,” and is it relevant?  Not as if I’m not proud of my county, but I’ve moved away. It’s where my parents live.  I have warmer feelings for the southern town where I spent three years of uni.  I thought being there had wiped out the Derbyshire drawl.  I carry on, about Trainspotting and drug culture.

“I’m sorry, could you please repeat that?”

I bet she’s looking at my roots thinking, “you could do with new highlights darling, and how about new glasses – they don’t suit your face shape, you could be so pretty with the right make-up.”

I just started wearing eyeliner, but my elbow slipped off the bathroom mirror this morning, so I took it off again.

I go back into “it’s shite to be Scottish” and “who’s skagging up?”  Into Gaelic, and Welsh and Welsh…

“Could you put that on the board please, Christiane cannot keep up with your words, are you sure that that is the pronunciation?”

“Well, it’s Gaelic, but that’s how everyone says it, I guess.  It’s my accent.”  And one of the girls actually makes a note.

And my best shirt feels like Top Shop seconds, and I am not glowing, or even perspiring but sweating like a bacon pig.

“Oh, sorry, could you put it on the board please.” It’s the bloody Gaelic again, I squeak up an approximate spelling.

But I carry on and conclude with the new movements in East Anglia, with new writers, new hopes for Europe even.

“Thank you, Alison.  We all enjoyed this very much class, did we not?”

Mumbled, but ever gracious thanks from the girls.

“And give my thanks to professor Fortescue-Smyth when you see him.”

“I won’t forget.”  She smiles a rubbery smile.

“And thank you… for…”  I have a quick think, “the experience.  It has been very… challenging to approach the texts from a comparative perspective.”  That shuts her up.  And Madame Martin and her perfume leave the room.

The girls wake up. Kookai woman decides to flex her language muscles. “So where did you say you were from again?”  She moves her papers around on her desk, flashing her diamond engagement ring.

After the other girls stop cooing, I answer.  “Derbyshire”

“Oh,” a dramatic pause, “is not that where Trainspotting is set?”

I look round at the agreeing faces.  “Yes.  Yes.  Its capital, Matlock, is the heart of the Scottish drug trafficking industry.  The local mafia is called the Rams.”

They are writing this down.  Suckers.

“Trainspotting is actually set in a city called Ilkeston, where there have been a number of famous shootings this year.”

A few ohs. And a “…and you live there.”

They stop staring at the engagement ring and look at me.

“Yes, but I’m OK as I’m in with some of the gangs, I know the right people you know.”  I turn up the collar of my wool cardigan.  “Begbie’s actually modelled on my father.”

One of the girls asks me where I got my bag, but I am unspecific, which makes them ask even more.

“Yes the famous football team plays in the same colours as the local, tartan – black and white, it represents the dichotomy between good and evil in the texts.”  They write that down too.

“Black and white, underworld versus overworld, though everywhere’s underworld now the mines have closed, a recurring theme in the stories.”

Even Kookai girl looks impressed; she speaks for the group, “Thank you very much for your help.  Have a safe journey back to…”

“Derbyshire.  Yes thanks and good luck with your exams next week.”  As I get up, Madame Martin wafts back in.

“Goodbye.  And have we got lots of notes, class?”

Well they have five lines to work on.  I was so nice spelling it all out for them so they’d understand.  They got it all down.

I leave the stuffy courtyard of the university ready for anything.  I am in Paris, and I want to be there.  So I can move house, I can meet new people, I already have.  I stand on the Pont Marie and throw my dissertation pages into the murky Seine, one by one, like a lizard shedding skins.

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Make Sure You Have One – a short story

I have blogged this before, but I have just noticed a glaring error on my introduction so I am blogging it again! International copyright remains with the individual author, ie Becky Deans and any similarities to any people or organisations living or dead is just one of those bizarre coincidences! Enjoy! This uses the same characters as the short story published in Magpie (2000) and the novel chapters published here recently.

Make Sure You Have One

It was eight o’clock.  If Simon had had a shave while Sarah was cooking breakfast.  Hell, if Sarah had let him have a shave while she had gone to the trouble of cooking breakfast, things would have been better.  They were now stuck in a queue outside Bardill’s Island that stretched from junction 25 of the M1. Simon reckoned there was at least three miles of queuing to go and who knows how long that would take.

Simon rubbed his face, his freshly shaved follicles still bristling slightly.  He was a hairy man.  Sarah scrutinised him, annoyed by the scratching, like nails on sandpaper.  Even if he was doing it without meaning it, he was winding her up.  She felt he was drawing her attention to his shave, to the fact he had to help with breakfast.

But why should she cook while he shaved? She couldn’t see why she should be fulfilling the working class role of woman-who-gets-up-early-to-feed-her-man, while he set about preening.  That was the kind of thing her grandma used to do.  Didn’t she deserve time for herself before work? It was all she could do to put mascara on these days before she was shooed out of the house.

They went this early to avoid the traffic.  Which traffic they were actually avoiding escaped Sarah’s attention, stuck as they were behind the whole of a car dealership’s forecourt, lights gleaming like rubies, exhausts smoking like factories.  Apparently, they were avoiding the real peak flow that rolled out of their drives at eight thirty to try to reach Nottingham by nine-ish. Those who had to queue at Bardill’s roundabout even further back than the M1 junction.

After seven-thirty, every ten minutes they started late added another twenty to the journey.  It had all been much worse since the railways had started playing up. The car purred along with throaty male aggression.

Sarah tried to listen to Radio One and remember who she was.  ‘One love, one life, make sure you have one.’ She was young. This was a stopgap. She checked her makeup in the sun visor mirror and sang along to All Saints.  She tried to forget she was even in a car.

‘Do you have to?’ Simon turned the radio off. Suddenly the engine noise seemed to engulf the whole car.  Sarah carried on singing at the top of her voice.

‘Stop it.  You look like a loony.  What do you think people at work are going to say with me with a loony in my car.  This is not a disco. And anyway, you’re out of tune.’

‘How would you know?  You can’t even play the recorder.’ Sarah sneered at him and carried on singing. She could drown out the engine noise and the sound of Simon scratching his face, even the work she was going to, by singing.  Sarah knew she was a good singer. Her piano teacher once suggested she sing on one of his dance tracks when he got his dance tracks ready. Her Mum said she was better than the Spice Girls.  She put the radio back on.

‘I wouldn’t wanna be anywhere else but here. Wouldn’t want to change anything at all.  Anything, oh why.’

It was a job she never wanted to go to in the first place.  She didn’t start until 9.15 either.  They were now in the right hand lane about three cars from the island.  They had been queuing for five minutes and Simon said the engine temperature was rising.

‘Perhaps we won’t get there,’ Sarah said breaking off her song.

‘Don’t sound so happy about that. I’ve got a presentation at nine and I’ve got some preparation to do before that.  This car has always been so reliable.’  He gritted his teeth and prepared to go onto the roundabout. They were going straight on.  A rusty Volvo from the junction they were passing pulled in front and nearly went into the side of them as they went left onto the A52 and he went right on to Toton.  ‘Bloody weekend drivers.’

‘Calm down.’

Simon’s mutterings gave her inner dread.  When they first got together, she thought she was going out with somebody reasonable and cool but now she was beginning to wonder if every man turned into their cardigan-wearing Dad about the age of thirty.  Too much time talking about taxes, too many bank accounts, too many banks and all too much television.  Soon watching the television and sitting in traffic jams would be all Sarah did outside of work.

Simon continued to stare at the dials in front of him, then creep forward a little, then stare at the dials some more, then stare at the traffic.  His eyes stared intently as if the road had good calves or an excellent pair of tits.

‘We don’t have sex anymore.’

Simon carried on looking straight ahead.  Anticipating the road. It was as if he hadn’t heard her.

‘We don’t do it.  What happened?’

Sarah watched a grey Mondeo change from the right-hand lane to the left and a black Mercedes go from the left to the right. This ballet of the road caused Simon to break twice, curse twice.

‘It’s idiots like these who make the damn things slower.  Why can’t people just get into the right lane?’  He banged his fist on the steering wheel then looked right at her, pitifully. ‘What’s happened to this country?’

He looked so weak. So feeble. So much like he needed her.  It was dangerous.

‘Keep your eye on the road if you are not going to pay attention to me.’  He put his hand on her thigh, like he used to all the time when they first went out. They used to like driving along like this, still connected. Sarah stroked his face.  It bristled. They started to progress at normal speed again.

She had to give him his hand back as they approached another queue. It was road works at Bramcote Island. They chugged along in the left hand lane. Sarah started to rap along to Eminem. Simon didn’t seem to hear.

Simon kept staring at the dashboard. They were only going 20 mph.  Sarah started to sing along to Madonna. Simon didn’t.

‘Is the car all right?’ She thought she’d better sound interested. The car always was all right. In a way, it was the one constant thing in her life. It wasn’t hers and she didn’t own any part of it.

‘The red light’s flashing.’

‘What does that mean?’

‘I’m not one hundred percent sure.  I think it means we’re overheating.’ Sarah put her face next to his to look. ‘Careful,’ Simon said.

‘You think.’ Sarah turned the radio off. ‘What do we need to do?’

‘We don’t need to be in this queue.  It will only make it worse.’

They were ten cars behind the traffic lights, where they would turn left and go down a rat run that normally didn’t clog up. They couldn’t afford to crawl along for much longer.  Simon turned off the engine.

‘Will that help?’

‘It can’t get any hotter.’  The traffic lights changed and he had to move again and switched the engine back up again. The red light flashed again.

‘Should we go home?’

‘I’ve still got work to do. I’ll need to take it to the garage.  Fuck, I can’t afford the time off.  What am I going to do?’ Sarah noticed drops of sweat on his face.

She took a tissue and wiped his face. ‘We’ll sort it out.’ They were half way around the roundabout now. Suddenly a siren started. ‘Is that the car?’

It was an ambulance coming up behind them.

‘God, this is all we need. And it can’t get past.  It will have to go behind us. We can’t afford to stop anymore.’

Now there were two flashing lights in the car, the ambulance aching to get past, and the engine aching to cool. Was five pounds an hour worth it? Sarah’s head hurt.

They started up again and Simon turned left into Bramcote village, praying there wouldn’t be any more interruptions to their journey.  The ambulance pulled past them and down to the left, to the A52.

‘Accident on the M1, I suppose.’

He shrugged. It was commonplace.

‘They didn’t have to wait long, did they? No.’ She paused. ‘How is the car?’

‘It’s holding it’s own, just about, I s’pose. I just hope it gets us to work.’ Simon rubbed his face again. Now she knew it wasn’t aimed at her. His face was red where he’d rubbed it.  She stroked it. ‘I’m trying to concentrate.’

‘Sorry.’

She thought she went to work because she needed the money but if she really thought about it she wondered what the hell she was doing.  Simon earned three times more than her. He let her keep her money; she didn’t contribute to the house; it was a stopgap until she sorted herself out. Pretty long stopgap; Sarah thought at some point she would have to concede that her administration job was all she was going to get.  She’d been trying so long to get out of all that. She was a graduate. She had a brain. So had so many other people like her.  As her grandma would say, ‘life’s hectic if you don’t weaken’.

All around her the arteries of the city clogged to a slow funereal procession, the light on the dashboard flashed and Simon swore.  She turned the radio all the way up and didn’t stop singing until they were in car park B.

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Chapter One of Simon Says: Perfect Prison

Simon says

 

Chapter 1: Perfect Prison

 

Who knows how she got to that moment? Banging on the kitchen door, demanding to be let out. She was cooking a pasta bake, pasta steaming away, needed a tissue, and she couldn’t get out of the door.

Simon had Louis, their son, their one and a bit year old. She could hear them playing, probably running the ride-on car along the wooden floors of the dining room and sitting room. But if she could hear them, why couldn’t they hear her? She rattled the door again, aware of the newness of the fake-old hinges and the cost of replacing the pitch pine door. She shouted, ‘love, can you let me out please?’

Nothing. She was actually getting angry now. Of course, there was sure to be a reason, perhaps the sitting room door was closed. But this was not part of the deal. And her nose was dripping.

They’d put the bolts on the doors because Simon didn’t want to have stair gates on the doors downstairs, and they didn’t want Louis to get into the kitchen. They had a bolt on the stairs as well to stop him disappearing off. Sarah had managed to persuade him to put a stair-gate on the stairs eventually, though he wasn’t keen on messing up the paintwork. But Simon had spent a lot of time painting the doorframes in Farrow and Ball pointing and he didn’t want to cut into them. He didn’t really want kiddy stuff all over the house.

She shouted again, rattled the door some more. What would it take to break it? But was she really so desperate? She started to make the cheese sauce, weighing up the butter, reserving her energy.

Could she get out of the back door and bang on the front to be let in? She checked the pasta wasn’t boiling over on the stove. It was hard to clean the starch off the stainless steel when she lost concentration and let that happen. She moved through the utility to the back door, turned the handle. It was locked. She was locked in the kitchen. She couldn’t quite believe it.

She shouted again. ‘Simon. If you don’t let me out of here soon, I’m going to break the bloody door off the hinges.’

The door opened.

‘We couldn’t hear you.’

She didn’t look at his eyes.

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Titles for Novels

I am indulging myself here, blogging while fulfilling my son’s breakfast order. But it has suddenly struck me that I have four working titles for books: Simon Says; Learning to Growl: the Truth about Sax and Gender; The Legacy of Revolt, and The Single Parents’ Strength Society.
Not sure about the last title, but know what it is and how to write it. Might be short stories. The Legacy is my difficult third novel with multiple plots in multiple time zones. Including Preston.

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Chapter Two

I’m so excited. I’ve just found Chapter Two of a novel that I am having real trouble writing. I didn’t even realise I’d managed Chapter Two. It needs some work, but would you like me to write some more?

Chapter two

Every day she’d count the boats. See which ones were in and which ones were out. Imagine what it would be like to be on holiday. Some people led different lives.

Simon and Sarah weren’t poor. Not at all. But they didn’t go on holiday any more. Simon had decided that they should spend all their money on nice things for the house. Sarah just wanted him to be happy. So they lived a simple life in their Grade II listed converted farm house.

The house looked like a show home. Sarah always thought show home was a silly phrase. There’s no home in show. Showing is all about having nothing on your tables, nothing on your surfaces. Everything the appearance of clean. Sarah knew that things were filthy underneath.

But it was the way that Simon liked things and that was important. It was silly of her to leave the knives the wrong way round in the drainer so the water spilled out of them. She should have known where to leave the cloth. She should have known him by now. They had been together for years. Since Sarah was 22 but felt longer. Ten whole years to get to know each other.

Now they had Louis and Sarah worked when they could. They couldn’t pay childcare and Sarah certainly couldn’t have paid it out of her unstable freelance wage. So Sarah had no money.

She mainly stayed inside with Louis, so they would be in when Simon came home. He was a lively baby and didn’t sleep much so Sarah found it hard to get all the housework done and her work. Simon couldn’t stand it if he got home and the house wasn’t tidy. His main priority when he got in was to clear away all Louis’s toys so there was order in the living room. He never helped her with making dinner any more. He did enough with working.

Every day she would take Louis for a walk to get him to sleep, as he didn’t seem to sleep otherwise. And she would go the same way at the same time. Rain or shine. Like a zombie. It was something she did. Like breathing. She couldn’t afford to do much now they had Louis, but at least she could walk.

It was a solitary thing. The whole of Shardington seemed to be asleep as she walked. She rarely saw anyone. But she used to talk to Louis and that was something. He was ten months old and still not sleeping properly. She was worn out. But out she would go to count the boats in and out.

They were narrow boats at the new marina that had been there a matter of months. Sarah always took the path down there. There was a tea room, but she never stopped for a drink. She couldn’t afford it. She could barely afford to text these days, money was so tight.

The boats were all the names of Shakespeare characters or plays. They reminded Sarah of another life when she studied literature. She never really did Shakespeare in her degree as it didn’t fit, but still the names of the boats gave her a thrill of recognition. Ophelia. Cordelia. Henry V. People hired them out to go on holiday. But this was the recession, so most of the time they were all there to count. Today Portia wasn’t there. The quality of mercy…

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Twelve weeks to stop the diggers

mob21 (2)

Twelve weeks to stop the diggers

We are but Common people.

You can see the furrows in our brows.

We only want to protect what is ours

And has been ours for centuries.

We only want to revel in what we love.

We hate change, of course we hate change

Oh how we hate the passing of the seasons.

It makes us cold.

They try to silence us

But they haven’t cut our tongues.

We threaten revolution

With every breath. We

bang drums. We

can even change our diction.

And when they threaten, we roar.

Poem (c) Rebecca Deans. Top picture (c) Rebecca Deans. Picture below (c) Friends of Codnor Common. www.codnorcommon.co.uk www.twitter.com/codnorcommon

Ridge&Furrow-Land

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Place You

Here’s a poem that I just wrote. (C) Becky Deans 2014

Place You

Let me run my finger tips
Down your Roman road
Lay my hands on
Your ironworks.

Feel your daisies prick
The back of my head. Celebrate
Every field, every disaster. I expect

To feel the ground fall away
From me. They call it a sinkhole.
I’m ready with my torch.

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Pantry

I can’t remember when I wrote this, but it’s from around 1998.

Pantry

Brick-red eggs stand in line

On grey crown cups.

Earthenware pots glare outwards.

Boxes nestle

Cardboard on cardboard.

Spoons lie icy.

Our faces distort

In the harsh light

Fighting through the cracked glass.

Mist turns to dust.

There we learn our grains and wheat

Mix our oats.

The smooth white liquid

Rattles in our throats.

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