Tag: Nicholas Battey poetry

  • Poem: Holy Hay

    Holy Hay

    I didn’t have a chance to show you
    the sainfoin I sowed back in May,
    remembering our holiday in Spain
    where we kept seeing it in bloom
    by the road and on waste ground, covering
    whole hillsides, great cerise stains
    of what we later learned was Holy Hay.
    Back here I bought some and spread it, watching
    as seedlings appeared, unfurled nodding leaflets
    in the rough and roguing wind and rain.
    Maybe it was the wet, or the rabbits;
    whatever, just one made it through to flower,
    when each closed and softly bristled brush became
    a clump of rosy Jagger lips. Yet I remember

    wrongly: it wasn’t Spain, it was Sicily,
    and maybe what we saw was Sulla,
    Italian sainfoin, a deeper red colour,
    but its name would never stick with me;
    not like Holy Hay, coumarin still drifting
    from an early mowing, with vetch and clovers,
    sweet vernal grass, sown by an unseen other
    who disappeared with the passing spring.
    That’s why I tried it in our garden,
    feeling it somehow sacred, so it might recover
    the past; seeing it there you would laugh and
    I would find in that perennial trait
    passed down from your dear, faithful father
    a way back to those fertile fields of grace.

    Feature Image: Flowers of Hedysarum coronarium at the Jardin des Plantes, Paris

  • Poem: ‘All is Number’

    All is Number

    If the late afternoon light is beautiful
    but God’s not behind it
    then my mind is just classifying;

    if the late afternoon light is beautiful
    and God designed it,
    it’s a blessing and a deep unknowable well:

    light seems a word beyond metaphor —
    a wave and a particle
    neither wave nor particle,

    energy cast out of the sun,
    passed through a vacuum —
    so vast in its power

    the plump earth greens luminous
    and humans agree terms to barter for
    what’s there which lies shimmering
    and only calculable.

  • Poem – ‘Psalm’

    Psalm

    The light and the wind on the water these wild winter days are breath of it
    The cardinal sun below cumulus flaring up skybeams a pulse
    Gathers the gloom but high in the east celestial moon unhides behind heart-racing clouds
    All in the arms of physics and this is heaven we are blessed to happen in

    Feature Image: Daniele Idini

  • Nicholas Battey: April Light

    April Light

    I’ve let the world of people go
    in favour of growing
    spring evenings,
    what all the buds know,
    the jonquils and the willow,
    the prattling birds,
    water chasing water to river,
    fold of showers.
    What sage said April is the cruellest month,
    the year’s promise
    in its tall shadows?
    Let the world of people go.

     

     

  • Poetry: Nicholas Battey

    Last Breath of Leaves

    Cup a pear, hear it abscise,
    number the days until ripe;
    the river chuckles with swollen pride –
    back to a ditch by six,
    drained away to the scaly, selfish sea.

    At dawn there’s steam across the water,
    a cloud of egrets scuds over;
    old and waiting, mud for water,
    leaves for a last breath
    of wind, tremor, helical free fall –

    after life, lope and leap
    to nattering heaps; then left
    to turn to mull, down horizons sift,
    forgotten shades of ochre,
    lignin nets over rheumy, russet stones.

    Fish the shilletts from their dark homes
    in the deep, brown ocean;
    grateful, cosseting crumbs swirl in,
    close and ready for roots:
    succouring limbs of bulb, corm, meristem.

    Here my mulling days are numbered,
    pride in appearance doomed;
    hares teem across the water,
    while clouds of regrets scud over;
    for I am old and loping after life.

  • Poetry: Nicholas Battey

    Leaf-ladder to the Sky

    Dusk drums down the harbour,
    Seagull sirens sound alarms,
    A quiet motor sings;
    Shards of mingling words slip away
    Where huddled houses hug the bay;
    A fish flops on the scalloped sea,
    Ripples spreadly ring,
    Ring, and ring, diminishing, to me:
    Here are all enchantments reined,
    Stowed within this compassed, solitary brain,

    Haven to the slopes of coastal trees
    Quiffed by parching westerlies;
    Also, yellow leontodon,
    Speckled on banks like sodium stars,
    Where dreadlocked gorse gives way to grass;
    Sheep-clipped sward; sun-lidded eyes; Doppler flies;
    Various winds playing on and on,
    While brambles leaf-ladder to the sky:
    Here are all enchantments lain,
    Meaningless, but marvellous, just the same.

    Half-moon, bling of eventide
    Hauls on saps which flow in time
    To an ancient pulse;
    Wyrt and weed together hear
    The chuckle of the inner sphere;
    Clackery of wind in rigging
    Sees strait waters salsa,
    Slap; soon sea-swells serry unforgiving:
    Here are all enchantments made;
    Out there, the consequences born, and paid.

    Roses like suns arise and grow
    Across the ramshackle brow;
    A heavy scent
    Swallows on the drooping air,
    Is gone, recalled as summer
    In the addled world behind,
    Where wishes, sentiment
    And bamboozling nature recombine;
    Hence are all enchantments lulls,
    Hummed by puzzled gardeners of the skull.

    Featured Image: Daniele Idini

  • Poetry: Fisheye by Nicholas Battey

    Fisheye

    I, smudge in the eyescape of others,
    As my trowel lodges in mulch,
    Palm-sore, snuggle the quiet bulbs
    Into the trickling earth which inhumes us,
    While these, artfully coned, only swoon
    To consecrate a humble bloom.

    The sun paints everslant shadows all day
    In this great sphere of transition
    Centring nowhere, where I witness
    Clattering jackdaws, black hands at edges of vision;
    A pigeon diving to the ancient oak
    Descants over a cloudsong.

    I work head down and I do not care
    About the crunching crowds along
    The path, children puddle-jumping,
    All actions an acting in the long
    Blind sleep of self, beneath the bronze Scots pines,
    Aplomb, adamantine

    Sentinels, setiferous fists raised to the hollow blue,
    Heedless of a conscious cry.
    Hedges patrol, keep watch on me,
    Vain and stretched in fisheye,
    Where the early frost becomes a forest of drops
    On the blinkless, lashy grass.