Author Archives: admin

There are hidden places…

on the north coast of the island, pebble beaches where the German concrete ruins rise up from pink boulders and cliffs. And there is a glade, steep and shaded, with a memorial to a British Special Forces raid, lives wagered when the order was out to kill all commandos. I found a bullet still in its cartridge there, lobbed it far into the ferns. It can feel lonely in the North Coast ravines, away from the choked houses and clipped lawns of the main port town, and that must be a precious thing. There’s no yesterday, only the silent gathering of the past.

shore

The web promises…

so much, but gives back little for the hours it steals. It’s too hard to ignore the commerce and schlock, the maneuvers and machinations of the merchants that fund it all. Cars and homes and holidays aren’t worth a lifetime’s questing, if even a moment. Browsing is time in coma, a dereliction of duty to self, picking crumbs from other men’s tables. None of it, not one page or post or line can match a few seconds walking around the island garden or daydream-wandering by a train window. Those journeys lead to insights and discoveries from your own thoughts, alone and untainted. Sweet physical world. And sweeter vistas of the unshackled mind.

garden

 

 

They watched the approaches…

from lonely forts and towers. A redcoat with an 18 pounder. A boy in feldgrau with an MG-42. And now me and the kids, climbing the stones and staring out at the chop, waving to the tourists on the Saint-Malo ferry.

castle

We all look out…

at a letterbox strip of life, trying to make sense of the universe. There’s so much data on display, the vast library of a world with its words in motion. This house I visit on the granite island has a garden walled by trees and they make their own sway and whisper as the sea breezes rush through; I’ve heard that same air swell over twenty summers and heard it nowhere else. This heartbeat maze is well-supplied of variety and I’m mindful of the particles, the Lucretian molecules streaming down beyond counting, the call of the wind in one island corner where I’ve tilted my head to gaze at the trembling leaves. And all those other islands to explore. Fingers reaching out beyond the wire, stretching to feel a different air.

wire

Hello Sea…

you moon-slave basin of blue. Wash away the cares, scour away the worries. I’ve missed your salt sting kisses.

sea

 

The country’s bankrupt…

the recovery’s ersatz, the political class is floundering and NASA says the icecaps are melting. We’ve got 200 years, max. But on my walk back from town in the constant rain, the gates stood open to hope. We’ll have clean fusion and new propulsion drives for the rockets in a decade or two and nascent planet homes to wander, pebbles on a black shore. I’ll see twin suns and phosphorescent birds and all the fantastic sights I dreamed of as a kid reading Asimov, Heinlein, Bradbury and the others, huddled in front of the electric bar fire. And if I don’t make it, the nippers will, before the polar bear cubs are heard mewling on the high street. Books are all escapes. No wonder my visions of hope follow the same wooden horse tunnels, barbed wire squeeze-throughs and stop-or-I-fire bolts for the treeline.

gates

Wounds heal…

but you have to host the scars. Out wandering on the vale of doom that’s my forties, I’ve learned that I no longer mend as I did as a kid. When I pick up some malady or clunk nowadays I don’t clear it completely, it’s as though the body knows it will have to carry some remnant ache or knobble from future blows and molecular assaults, can’t shrug them off as before. The bar’s dropped and I begin to understand how I might never clamber free from the elephant pit of a serious illness or smash, not get back all that was lost. And that makes me wish I’d burned brighter in footloose years, knowing the invincibility of youth was sand falling in a turned glass and the get out of jail card of shiny rejuvenation would be snatched away. That sand falls for every one of us. And the numbers are hidden, spinning, ungraspable until the moment they always foretold arrives.

numbers

Falling asleep I listen…

to the falling Oxford rain. And on waking I see it paint the junction outside my house shiny black and turn the Victorian bricks garish pink and the shrubbery a green so vernal it stammers the eye. And I remember youth and my coffee-shop whispers of Baudelaire and his rain-streak prison bars, Heinrich Boll and the Irish skies leaking onto his journal. I see again that rain in Durban that coated everything in view, all instantly drenched and dripping and even the lines I tried to write. And London days at the desk, watching the plane trees shower the tilting pavements through the long afternoons. All those journeys and dashes when there was a chance to meet, running stooped beneath the cloudburst, crashing through cafe doors into light and noise and then talking, spouting for hours. Sharing worthless secrets and book visions, seeding all with my camouflaged hopes and clues. In sanctuary, two faces over the cups. Is it still like that now? The kids run in, order their drinks and lock eyes to their devices. But they must watch for signs from friends and others, the codes, the suggestion of what stays hidden in those moments alone when they’ve listened to the rain? Those times of drizzle murmur and mystery. Oxford rain is all rain, I feel today, at my dawn window.

Opening line, with apologies to MacNeice.

rain

Words suggest things…

images rope them down. In prose, you can choose how much description you’ll add to a scene, face or thought but in film you have to tear the curtain back and show it all. You can try hiding or blurring light and detail but it soon feels like style and trickery. So images have that stark, instant power to entrance and haunt the viewer, whereas words tiptoe in and plant lingering truths.

face

The adjutant assassin…

watched Hitler lay his cap on the map table and lead his Eastern-Front generals to the far corner of the room. I wonder what went through the would-be killer’s mind as he stole over and stretched a hand to touch the Fuhrer’s hat? Perhaps he was thinking of quickly trying it on, the costume of the emperor, to see how it might change him? Or maybe it was mockery and playful subversion, with the time-bomb already concealed and primed in the hallway, ready to be smuggled onto the master’s returning plane. He tugged at the fabric but the cap didn’t move. It took both hands to lift it easily. Hitler’s cap was lined with steel, even the black peak. It was armour-plated.

I don’t worry about sniper bullets. Or time-bombs and treacherous underlings. I have no underlings. There’s no killer hiding in the trees, no ticking device to blow me to atoms. I do worry about cows sometimes. I’ve seen them on the gallop, been chased by a maddened herd in the past. So I look along the path a little. And count my blessings if the road is clear.

field