Welcome to my World

Sunday, 31 July 2011

The Last Plant on Mars

Life was a struggle for the last plant on Mars
but the last plant on Mars didn’t know
there was only one place where conditions were right
for the last plant on Mars to grow.

It was touch and go for the last plant on Mars.
It had found the last patch of good earth.
The last plant on Mars spread its roots in the soil,
and clung on for all it was worth.

The roots of the last plant on Mars searched hard
as they burrowed deep under ground,
and the last plant on Mars found the last drops of water
that would ever on Mars be found.

The last plant on Mars grew glossy green leaves,
then a flower of purest blue.
Then inside the flower of the last plant on Mars
many thousands of tiny seeds grew.

The last plant on Mars turned its face to the sky,
from whence came, with a screeching sound
a man-made machine on a mission to see
if life upon Mars could be found.

The man-made machine spread its flexible feet
and made itself ready to land.
It landed on top of the last plant on Mars,
and crushed it to mush in the sand.

Saturday, 30 July 2011

The Holly Tree

The Holly Tree

As the North Wind tore
the snowballs from
her frozen palms,
the holly tree screamed.
Her fingers reached
to clutch them as
the urgent air
crumbled them
away on the wind.
She cried as she
turned her head to watch,
then, shaking the crumbs
from her crinkled skirts,
turned into the tumult
of frenzied flakes,
stretched out spiky fingers,
and waited.

A Margo Moment

         Country Girl

We both adore the country.
We moved here from the town.
We made this wild garden
once we’d cut the forest down.

There was just a muddy stream here,
that we had to have diverted,
and the quaintest little chapel
that my husband got converted.

It makes a lovely summer house
since we took the end wall out,
and fitted those new windows
I was telling you about.

It  was covered in funny pictures,
very old and badly done.
I think the way we’ve painted it
 bright pink is rather fun!

We built the house entirely
from the local stone,
and those funny little roof tiles
cost a fortune on their own.

But the barking of the foxes
disturbs me in the night
and all the birds start chirping
as soon as it gets light.

Every year about this time
the kitchen swarms with frogs
and those horrid leggy spiders
keep frightening my dogs.

So we’re packing up and moving
to a penthouse in the city.
I’m leaving all the garden gnomes,
although they’re rather pretty.

I’ll rather miss my wellingtons.
They make me look the part.
It’s such a shame we’re moving.
I’m a country girl at heart!

Friday, 29 July 2011

A small badger poem



Badger

Snuffling, shuffling like a tramp.
Muffled up against the damp.

Sniffing nose and clenching claws.
Finding, grinding with strong jaws.

Concentrated rhythmic sound.
Crunching, hunching on the ground.

Will he sense me? Can he hear
me scarcely breathing, very near?

Stripy nose, short-sighted eyes,
and a look of mild surprise.

Retreating duffle-coated, grey.
Silently he walks away.

Thursday, 28 July 2011

A Short Story


Awakening

   Papaya-pink seagulls scraped across the sunset as they flew to roost on bleak cliffs. Above my head, a dead branch, as stark as forked lightening against the darkening sky, mewed like a Siamese cat in the evening breeze. I imagined that the house put its arms around my shoulders as I sat there on the veranda, resting my aching limbs, watching the silver birch tree flowing, tousled as a mermaid’s hair.
   “Nina!” stabbed my mother’s voice, filling my head, tugging my attention to its feet. “Neena! Neena!” chanted like a police car siren.
   “I hate my nickname,” I thought through clenched teeth as I leapt up and hurried indoors.
   I was inside before I remembered that my mother was dead.

***

   My father, protector, confidant, best friend, had died six months before from a heart attack while I was in bed with ‘flu, leaving me to face the awful truth that my mother was, and had been for most of my life, an alcoholic. You imagine you’d notice, wouldn’t you, something like that? You’re thinking, ‘That’s silly! I’d know if my mother drank.’
   I did know, deep down. Everyone likes a drink, I told myself, a little glass of wine while they’re preparing lunch, a small tot of whisky to relax with in the evenings. I sympathised by telephone with her poor health, her insomnia, how some mornings she was so weak she had to lie down with a hot water bottle while my father took the dog out alone. I understood when visits were cancelled: ‘Your poor Mummy, she’s a bit poorly at the moment. Maybe in a month or two…..’
   It was only after my father’s death, when I was faced with a furious, bitter, cruel old woman, who never shed a tear for her husband of sixty years, who fell down the stairs every night, refused to eat, and heaped hatred upon anyone who tried to help her, that I realised that she was a drunk!

***

I got up early, as birds shook themselves and chirped their first morning note, as foxes slunk back through dew-covered grasses to their lairs. I had a lot to do. I worked automaton-like as I completed my mental list. At last I had finished. I filled the kettle and stood looking around the kitchen: sandwiches piled on plates under tight shiny cling film, bright salads gleaming in glass bowls, purposeful cakes made by neighbours anxious to offer support, unsure how best to do it. I checked the trays, the array of unmatched cups and saucers hastily borrowed from friends, the higgledy-piggledy assortment of glasses lined up like Dad’s Army on parade. I looked in the mirror, checked my hair, saw the lines of pain etched into my face, wondered fleetingly if they would ever go.
   “Ready, Mum?” said my son, smartly suited and serious.
   “I’m ready,” I said.
   We walked out of the house and down the path to the line of waiting cars. Heading the procession in a black limousine, my mother was waiting, tucked snugly in a white satin bed under her duvet of yellow roses. I had dressed her in clothes she hadn’t worn for years, a dress I’d found at the back of her wardrobe, fresh white cotton sprinkled with blue cornflowers, blue crystal ear-rings and necklace to match, a white cardigan, all dressed up for a summer’s day in the garden, a day watching Wimbledon, a day from the childhood I would have liked, a half-memory that wasn’t there, a wish, a might-have-been.

***

   I felt my father’s hand upon my shoulder.
   “Thank you all for coming,” I began, looking down at the very few exhausted, loyal faces staring back at me from the pews. “It is difficult for me to describe the way I feel today, as we gather here to say 'Goodbye' to my mother.”


The End

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Still musing on colour


The world is all colours

The world is all colours
exploding slowly,
spinning and swirling
around my head,
shards of reality
reflecting back at me
a million mirages,
fragmented.

The world is aroma
of every memory
layer upon layer
of complex smells,
zigzagging over
the time-space continuum,
concentric sensations
in bottomless wells.

The world is music,
softly surrendering
sounds of sensations
of sadness and joy,
each creature screaming,
its voice interweaving
expressing its presence
in loving alloy.

The world is a poem,
wordlessly spoken,
a caress of the voice,
of the call of creation,
a lyrical longing
to share in the symphony,
the anthem of
self-perpetuation.

The world is a cuddle,
a shaking awakening,
a challenge to battle,
to absorb and collate,
a spiralling hug
of tender sensation,
an infinite expression
of feelings innate.

The world is a riddle,
a cosmic conundrum,
a mosaic pavement
of mystical signs,
an unfathomable ocean
of mathematical equations,
a wonderful whirlpool
of fractal designs.

I see the world so brightly, my heart dances

Child of the Rainbow

I’m a child of the rainbow.
I was born in a storm,
as the sun and the rain met together.
I’m a creature of light.
I am made of bright colours
that glow in the stormy weather.

When the sun glows deep orange
In skies of dark blue,
as the heavy black thunderclouds form,
when I see silver flashes
and hear the sky roar,
I go out and run through the storm.

Down the soft violet hillsides
the rivers run red.
Green trees are washed clean by the rain.
When the golden sun breaks
through the indigo clouds,
I can dance in the rainbow again.

Monday, 25 July 2011

From my collection called "The Dishcloth."

The Dishcloth

Scurrying, hurrying,
running through the night,
hiding, crying, knowing
there’s nowhere to go but home,
nothing out here to fear,
nothing compared to you,
pacing the room,
fuming, waiting
for my return.

I didn’t mean to anger you.
I have added to my sin
the additional crime of flight,
of frightened flight.
I should have stayed
to face your rage.
I was afraid!

I understand how bad I am,
how slow to learn,
how worthless.
I try, I try, to do it right,
but tonight,
I wiped the working surface
with the wrong cloth.

I felt your wrath
behind me as you watched.
I knew I’d used
the wrong cloth.

My feet will not carry me
as I creep through sleeping streets.
I see the light shining
through my door.

I’m sorry I ran.
Please let me in.
Don’t hug me so hard.
It’s my fault, my fault.
I’ll stand here and listen.
I know I’ve done wrong.

Now you’re frowning, glowering,
towering over me.
I’m cowering and cringing.
But I’m listening, I’m listening,
as you explain once again,
as you go slowly over,
the system with the dishcloths.

Sunday, 24 July 2011

In memory of winter



Dawn

On pre-dawn banks of frozen lake
the silver swans asleep.
The trees, all stark with icicles,
stark shelter for the sheep.

Now through the skeleton branches
an icy east wind blows
the frost from black lace tree tops,
disturbing rooks and crows.

Their strident cries declare the dawn
as silver turns to gold,
and red-gold fox slinks stealthily,
eyes screwed against the cold.

Across the chilly hillside
many other creatures pass,
betrayed by clear dark footprints
cut clean in frosty grass.

In the distance there, the village,
still in sleeping silhouette,
and in the cosy cottages
nobody stirring yet.

The valley stretches languidly,
as colours one by one
flow liquid o’er the landscape,
awakened by the sun.

Saturday, 23 July 2011

An ode to bacon

To my heart’s desire

I dream of bacon,
‘tho I swore
to never more
dead flesh devour.
Resolve is shaken,
craving for
crispy bacon.
What strange power
can bacon have
that ever more,
when other meats
I once foreswore
don’t tempt me now,
but pain that grips
me, when I eat
my egg and chips
will drive me mad.
I long to savour
once more, that
tantalizing flavour
of bacon, crisp
and hot and greasy.
Who says not eating
meat is easy?

Friday, 22 July 2011

Oh, what a wicked person I am!

The Tooth Fairy Gets It

Ah-hahaha, I’ve done it
I’ve cast an evil spell.
The fairies that collect the teeth
will soon become unwell.

Now all the little children
won’t get money for their teeth.
They’ll lift their pillows up and find
dead fairies underneath.

Thursday, 21 July 2011

Small Talk

                                     Small Talk

“I write poetry,” I said.  I could see his eyes glaze over.
“I live with my son, on a hill, just outside Dover.”
“Would you like a turkey roll?”  he asked, passing me a plate.
“No, thanks, I don’t eat meat,” I said.  I saw a flash of hate.

“My wife was vegetarian,” he muttered, through his teeth.
“She’s living with a plumber.  They’ve moved to Hampstead Heath.”
“Do you have any children?”  I asked him, while I ate.
He glared at the egg mayonnaise on my plate.

“Oh, yes,” he said, “Three girls we’ve got.  They took their mothers’ side.
They used to visit me a lot, until the parrot died.”
I sipped my gin and tonic, and wondered what to say.
“The C.S.A. has crippled me,” he said, and looked away.

He’d finished all the turkey rolls, and started on the ham.
“She was into all this “New Age” stuff.  Our marriage was a sham.
She used to spend a fortune at the health-food shop each week.”
“They sell some lovely oils,” I said.  A nerve twitched in his cheek.

“What about your work?” I asked him.  “What is it you do?”
“I buy and sell antiques,” he snapped.  “It wouldn’t interest you.
They’ve got a few nice pieces here.  He’s worth a bob or two!”
“I love this house,” I said.  “They’re really lucky with the view.”

He stared out of the window at the valleys and the hills.
He said, “This wretched heartburn!  I forgot to bring my pills.”
He had another glass of wine.  I got another gin.
He said “Don’t eat the chicken!  She’s put too much garlic in!”

He finished up the chicken, while I nibbled on a carrot.
I said, to fill the awkward pause, “What colour was the parrot?”

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

The Talking Frog

The Talking Frog

It was one of those sleepy afternoons, sunny and warm, and me wandering round the garden with my secateurs, cutting a twig here, pulling a weed there, not thinking about anything in particular.
The frog was on the path. There were always frogs, sitting about, waiting for me to dig out the pond that the previous owners had filled in. It was on my list of jobs to do, if ever I found myself with super-human energy, or twenty years younger without arthritis. This frog was different. For a start, it seemed to be sunning itself, something any normal frog wouldn’t consider sensible. Secondly, when my sleepy eyes focussed on it, it looked up at me with intelligent enquiry, summing me up in quite an unsettling way.
You’re going daft, I told myself, and went to walk past, but the frog took a few unhurried steps and blocked my path. Well, I could have stepped over it, but there was something about its air of assurance which made me hesitate to do so.
   “Hello,” it said.
   “Hello,” I said back, wondering if I had sunstroke or something much more serious. “Do you want me to kiss you, so you can turn into a handsome prince?”
Well, you never know your luck. I’d been on my own for ten years since my husband left me for a younger model, and a handsome prince would be one in the eye for that barstard, and a boost to my ego.
   “No,” it said. “Definitely not. Have you got a ratchet strap?”
Now, I’m not terribly useful when it comes to tools. The shed was my husband’s domain, but I had the key and could see no reason, as he’d left me everything, out of lack of interest rather than generosity, why I couldn’t give anything I wanted to any passing Tom, Dick or Frog.
I was by this time wondering what hallucinating a talking frog was a symptom of, but other than that, I seemed fine, all the bits that usually hurt, still hurt, so I was probably awake, and everything else seemed normal, keys in my shorts pocket and all.
I went over to the shed, unlocked it and rummaged around, spotted the ratchet strap, dragged it out and took it back to the path. I rested it down in front of the frog.
   “There you go,” I said.
   “Grab hold of that end will you?” said the frog, and dragged the strap over to a bulging sack which I hadn’t noticed lying behind the spirea, (just coming into flower, so pretty), slid it underneath with a few tugs, and flung the end over the bag, (which must have taken all its strength), and looked at me.
   “If you can just tighten the strap for me?” said the frog, “Thank you.”
   “What’s in the bag?” I asked. Well, it is my garden.
   “Slugs,” said the frog. “Cheers for the strap,” and he hooked the end of it onto the back of a very small (well, it would need to be) aeroplane which stood next to the hostas, jumped in, switched it on, and shot up into the air. The sack whooshed past my head close enough to stir my hair, and I jumped back. I stood and watched as the sack disappeared, like a lost balloon, over the apple trees and along the top of the hill.
Now I know what you’re going to say. I should have asked more questions, but as I said, it was one of those balmy afternoons, you know? But I certainly didn’t imagine it, because I had to get up in the night because the shed door was banging in the wind. I’d forgotten to lock it. Lucky nothing got nicked, wasn’t I?      

Monday, 18 July 2011

Dear Miss Brown

Dear Miss Brown,

You were my first teacher, big, soft and kind, smelling of face powder. You played the piano in assembly, and it was wonderful and sad, and made me dance. You said it was Beethoven’s Minuet in G and that Beethoven was not much older than me when he wrote it. When you sang the hymns in your rich Welsh voice, your mouth went over sideways and I tried to do it too. In class, when we recited our times tables for you, all together, it felt so safe. You told us what good children we were. I didn’t know I was good. Mummy said I was naughty. She tried to get rid of me when I was in her tummy, pushed the pram with my sister in it along the beach, trying to shake me loose, she said.
On Mondays, we could tell the class our News. The other children told about their weekends, family trips to Virginia Water. I didn’t understand. Mummy said it was because they’d got cars. When it was my turn I couldn’t think what to say so I said “my sister’s naughty sometimes.” At home, when mummy cross-examined me about my day, she was angry and told me I was the naughty one. I must never talk to anyone about what happened at home.
I kept falling asleep during lessons so you got a bed for the classroom, but I couldn’t lie on it with lots of children there. They might jump on me when I was asleep like my sister did, press the pillow over my face so I couldn’t breathe, kneel on my chest and whisper to me how they’d cut me with scissors, laugh when I cried. Mummy shouted at me when I cried: “Be quiet. Your sister will have a fit.” It was my fault she had fits, because she didn’t want me to be born.
You chose me to wear a sari in the Christmas play. I was so happy, but then I was ill. Mummy made me stay in bed. You sent me home a cake and some tinsel in a paper bag, so I knew you were thinking about me. I tied the tinsel round my bedpost. It was green and sparkly like the sari.
When we went back after Christmas, in the playground, mummy said you were dead. “You’ll have a new teacher. Stop crying. Don’t be such a baby.” The playground was very big. My sister danced around me singing, “Miss Brown has been cremated, Miss Brown has been cremated.” She was still singing it after school, all the way home.
At home, I couldn’t find Susan, my doll. Mummy said, “You don’t want that dirty old thing. I’ve thrown it away.” I begged her to get it out of the bin, but she said it was gone for ever. You can’t get things back once they’ve gone.
I miss you, Miss Brown. I never told you how much I loved you.

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Wolf by Geraldine Aldridge

Wolf

I stroked a wolf.
following orders.
“Fist
not fingers.”
The wolf sniffed,
then licked my hand.
I heard a gasp.

I fell into those eyes,
 as gold as warm welsh gold
 from rugged mountains,
the colour of sunlit honey,
amber and rich.

I felt in that moment
more wolf more wolf
than ever I’ve felt human.

And something said, inside my head,
“I am Wolf.”

“Stroke his belly,
not his back,”
horsehair coarse,
tweed hacking-jacket hackles,
golden tufts woven with grey and sand.

Pinched face,
leaning, and lean,
an animal untameable.
I felt a longing, un-nameable,
a feeling I don’t get with my own kind,
to share his mind.

Saturday, 16 July 2011

A Short Story

Away with the Fairies

by Geraldine Aldridge


“Candy,” called the woman. “Candy, come to mummy!”

I stopped beside her, looking down the slope to where a white Labrador frolicked in the pond far below.

“She’s having a wonderful time,” I said.

“She won’t come back,” said the woman, turning sightless eyes to me. “She’s my guide dog. I just got her. I thought she’d like a good run.”

“Surely,” I began, but, no, that conversation would take too long, and I had to think of my blood pressure, of the baby I carried inside me.

“I’ll get her for you,” I said. Well, I couldn’t leave her there, could I? Couldn’t leave a blind woman standing in the park?

I ran down the slope to the pond. I felt my baby let go! I felt the moment when she left me. I caught the dog, returned it to the woman, went home, and packed my case for the hospital.


***


She ran away from me, my Dotty, let go of my hand. She always did. This day, in the park, she ran, little dot, in her red gingham dress, hand-smocked by me, white sandals, chubby legs, plump pink starfish hands waving to keep her balance. Up the slope she ran, to the seat at the top, and fell at the feet of an elderly woman, huddled on the bench, bundled washer-woman-like against the cold.

“Uppadaisy,” she said, as she pulled herself up on the woman’s grimy skirts. I puffed up the slope, as the woman reached out a hand, black with the dirt of days, of ditches, of destitution.

“That’s my daughter,” I gasped, my eyes forbidding the woman to touch her.

Dotty reached out a soft rose-petal pink hand, and put it gently on the woman’s calloused grimy palm. As I arrived at the bench, I looked down at the woman, there on the park bench that was obviously her home, her living room, her bed chamber, for today at least. Our eyes met. In the woman’s eyes, where I expected to see dull-witted emptiness, I saw a fire, so pure an emotion, it made me shiver.

“Dirty,” said Dotty, touching with one tiny finger the woman’s blackened hand.

“I am the fairy queen,” said the woman. “I am invisible. If I didn’t cover myself with mud, nobody would be able to see me.”

“Big,” said Dotty, stretching her chubby arms wide as she tried to give the bundled-up woman a hug.

“I am big with years,” said the woman. “Every year, I get fainter and lighter. For every year, I put on another coat. Otherwise I’d disappear completely.”

“Lottsa coats,” said Dotty, and we both looked down at the top of that curly head, as she delicately folded back the edge of each coat, like the pages of an old book, of the many the woman wore.

“I’m the fairy queen,” said the woman again, her voice so soft, it jarred with her whole being. “I am as light as thistledown. If I didn’t wear a hundred coats, the breeze would blow me away.”

Dotty looked up into her eyes, and grinned. Who could resist that toothy grin?

“Dotty be fairy too,” said my little daughter, and I felt the longing in her words, saw the longing in the old woman’s eyes.


***


I remember the look in the woman’s eyes. She was mad, some would say, ‘Away with the fairies’, in a completely different world. And yet, she was in fairyland. I am here, in this world where fairies don’t exist, remembering, the day that my Dotty went there too. I still shiver, when I think of that day when my little girl let go of my hand.

***

Thursday, 14 July 2011

Excerpt from Jenny and the Stone Egg by Geraldine Aldridge

Jenny and the Stone Egg


Geraldine Aldridge


                                             

Chapter 1


Eggs and Excursions
Sunday, 8th April, 2001

   “The Stone Egg is dying,” rasped Chark, placing his tiny hand on the rough brown shell. Light from within the egg flickered as he touched it, illuminating Chark and his companions, casting shimmering shadows from their wings onto the wet walls.
   The cave smelled damp. Green slime dripped from a fang-like stalactite high in the roof and landed with a plop on Jenny’s shoulder. She flinched. Her hand clasped Sabre’s lead more tightly.
   “What laid it?” asked Mike.
Jenny heard the excitement in his voice. He’s not scared, she thought.
   “The Earth laid it,” said Chark. “Every thousand years the Earth lays a stone egg like this one, with molten lava at its heart.”
   “Up by the castle just now,” Jenny said, “you said you were looking for me. Why me?”
   “An ancient legend led us to you,” said Chark. “Only you can save the world from disaster. Something’s wrong with the egg. If it dies, life on Earth will end.”  
    “But how can Jenny help?” asked Mike. “Why Jenny?”
   He’s jealous, thought Jenny. Sabre whined and pressed against her leg.
   “Please take the egg,” said Chark, avoiding their eyes.
   “I’m not sure I want to,” said Jenny. “I’ll mess it up. Mike would love to. Why don’t you ask him? What would I do with it?”
   “Go on, Jen,” said Mike. “I’ll help you. Don’t be such a girl.”
   Just because I don’t climb every tree I pass, thought Jenny, or jump onto every wall. I hate caves. I want to get out of here. She shuddered. “Okay,” she said. “But if it dies, it won’t be my fault.”
   “We entrust it to you,” said Chark. “Guard it well. Take it.”
   The egg’s shell felt cold and rough. Chark and his companions flew to the mouth of the cave, beckoning Jenny, Mike and Sabre to follow. The two children blinked as they stepped out into the sunshine.
   Loud music blared out from Mike’s mobile. “Hi Mum,” he said into it. “Sorry, I forgot. We’re walking Sabre round the castle. Yeh, we’ll run.” He turned to Jenny. “We’re supposed to be at home, Jen,” he said. “You’re all having Sunday tea with us, remember?”
   Jenny saw the light inside the stone egg flicker and vanish, like a flame caught by a gust of wind.
   “I think the egg just died,” she whispered. “I didn’t do anything.”  It flared once more and she felt a tingling in her fingers. “Oh,” she gasped.
   “You may still save it,” said Chark.
   “I’ll try,” said Jenny, “You’ll have to tell me what to do.” She tucked the egg into her bag.
   “We’ve got to run,” said Mike. “We’ll come back tomorrow. What’s the egg going to hatch into?”
   “It isn’t going to hatch,” said Chark. “I’ll explain later.”  
   Jenny said, “We’ll have to sneak out very early in the morning. Mike’s coming to stay with us because his mum and dad are going on a geology trip, so we need to be home to see them off,” she explained to Chark. “We’re busy after that.”
   “We’ll be waiting on the bank,” said Chark, as Jenny, Mike and Sabre turned to go.
   “Well, I’ve never believed in fairies,” Jenny muttered to Mike.
   “We’re not fairies,” called Chark after her. “We’re Avielles.” As Jenny and Mike looked back, the Avielles flung cloaks around their shoulders, pulled on beaked hoods and became jackdaws again, just as they had been when the children had first met them.

Tuesday, 12 July 2011

Two children's poems

Action Poem

Seaweed

I’m a piece of seaweed,
swaying to and fro.
I float up high.
I sink down low.

I swim on the water.
I spin round and round.
I run onto the beach.
I lie down on the ground.

The waves come to take me
back to the sea.
I’m a piece of seaweed.
Come and dance with me.


 xxxxx

A poem in free verse

Stones in a Pond 

My best friend said, I don’t like you any more,
casually, like throwing a stone
into a pond.
And, like a stone, it sank in and kept sinking,
sank in deep.
To her, she had thrown a stone.
It was done.


But, with me,
like a stone going…Plop
into a pond,
the ripples spread out
and kept spreading,
wider and wider,
filling me with the words…

I don’t like you any more!

Plop!

Monday, 11 July 2011

From a book of poems I am writing about abusive relationships and bullying.

Always in the way

She was always in the way.
Always in the way.
Even while she slept, somehow,
She was always in the way.

Always in the way,
at the beginning of the day
when she brought a cup of tea,
but she never used a tray.

Always in the way,
His music began to play.
Above it, he could never hear
What she was trying to say.

She was always in the way,
from when he first came to stay,
even though she tried to please him 
She was always in the way
                                          
She was always in the way
He would often have to say
“Get out of my way!
Why are you always in the way?”

She was always in the way
even on their wedding day,
Even though she promised
to love, honour and obey.

She was always in the way
even when she passed away,
he missed an important football match
the day she passed away.

She was always in the way,
as he grew old and grey.
As he tried to sleep, her memory
was always in the way.

An excerpt from one of my children's books

In the Beginning

The Stone Egg hung alone and cold in space.
It cried out. Mournful, lonely words it spoke.
Its call was heard. The being that it woke
felt lonely too, in some far distant place.
Light years away a rainbow touched the ground.
Upon it many coloured crystal eggs
hatched out, and baby dragons stretched their legs,
then spread their wings, and flew towards the sound.
The dragons landed on the Stone Egg’s shell.
The Stone Egg, frightened, struggled to escape,
but then it knew, at last, that all was well.
They curled their wings around its oval shape.
The Stone Egg sighed. The baby dragons knew
this was as it should be. The Stone Egg grew.