Friday, September 18, 2015

Meet the Poets: John Malvert.

Pimento Poets: Meet John Malvert.



Bumble bee

                      Engineers inform me 
that technically, 
the bumble-bee due to its weight, 
shape and size,
should not be able to fly,
as it defies 
all the known principles
of aero-dynamics.

Yet to every engineers’ surprise
it does!

How pleasant to know that even now, 
not everything,
Conforms to the so called
'norm' of things,
and that a bumble bee with wings,
                      has now become an enigma,
and carries the stigma 
of being called 
'odd.






Copyright by: J. Malvert 

'As I Am' by Paul Mein.

 As I am

He is a man,
as I am,
but he plots in palaces,
holy places, holes in the earth.
His words reach
to soldiers, apostates,
blind followers;
words wrapped around
misguided, blinkered philosophies;
bleak words, excluding words,
inflaming words;
words inciting to hatred, killing
with extreme prejudice ­ the women who dare
to bare their heads,
teachers and writers
who set minds free,
the wide­eyed orphan in
the bombed­out basement,
the doctor trapped by bodies
in bold­drenched corridors,
men like me ­whose ‘crime’ is to
be overheard, seen,
in the wrong place, wrong time.
So I run, walk, carry, crawl
with others like me,
to break, an exhausted wave,
on the razor wire
of far borders,
tear gas and batons
our welcome to uncertain freedom;
ripped from our birth-country
because a man, as I am,
decides which side
of colour, belief, tribe
is right or wrong;
a man, as I am,
who plots in palaces...

©     Paul Mein      26/8/15

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Next two meetings of Pimento Poets

Next two Meetings of Pimento Poets will be on :


Monday 12th October, 2015.


Monday 9th November, 2015.





Please add to your diaries if you haven't already done so.

Meet the Poets: Gerry Miller.

Gerry Miller

THE KISS
(or every Parent's Nightmare)

When he was born and came home with his mother
we were afraid on our own to look after our treasure.
When he lay still in his cot we looked at each other
and gave him a kiss to check he was breathing.

He was just a small child that first day at school.
Proudly we watched as he skipped with his friends up the lane.
He never looked back nor saw the tears in our eyes
as we blew him a kiss from hearts full of pain.

Later he walked to the Cubs with his friend
staying together and looking both ways at the kerb
before crossing the road, then straight home at the end.
Both going and coming too old for a kiss.

In his teens he loved going out in his bike
up and away when he saw the sun rise.
He was always home before darkness to tell us
where he had been. The kiss was in all our eyes.

When he started to drive he knew how we worried
and told us exactly where he would be.
He assured us that driving he never hurried
and gave his mother a kiss before going to bed.

Until that night. We both looked at each other
when the clock struck eleven and our hearts turned cold.
We made excuses and turned the t-v down
to hear the car come home. The kiss was on hold.

Minutes turned into hours and our feelings changed.
Telling each other there was nothing amiss
but increasingly angry because it was strange -
bewildered and aching to give him his kiss.

Saying nothing we knew we would have to ask
how he could treat us like this after all we had done,
and ask if the kisses meant nothing to him
when he knew how we worried until he came home.
The phone never rang. Lights went out all around.
Anger plotted how to deal with the boy. Night wore
on and off until the doorbell rang as daylight dawned
to silhouette a policeman standing at the door.

We were shamed of our anger as we were told
that our precious son did all he could to miss
the speeding driver. For hours he lay dead in a ditch.
And we were not there to give him his kiss.

Copyright by Gerry Miller.                  

www.gerrymillerpoetry.com

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Writers Live!

Writers Live!


Friday 13th. November
7p.m.



Southwell Library


Paul Mein presents this exciting opportunity for local writers
(of poetry, short stories, novels plays...) to perform their work
in public.

Book in advance for a 5 or 10 minute slot or come along and
listen to the wealth of talent we have in this area. Slots are
already being filled so please make sure you get your name
down soon.


Free event with light refreshment, bar available.


'Please contact Southwell Library on 01636 812148 to book a 5/10 minute slot.'


Thanks.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

New Readings by Pimento Poets on 11th September, 2015.

In connection with the recent exhibition 

‘Picture the Poet’ 
And the Summer School Photography event 

held at  Lincoln University


  Pimento Poets will be reading their poems on:  The Magna Carta, Freedom of Speech and Democracy.

  On Friday 11th September, 2015
  (10.30 – 12noon)

     At The Collection and Usher Gallery, Lincoln.
        

Poets reading will include:  Shirley Bell, Vernon Goddard, Susan Flower, Nic Lance, John Malvert, Celia McCulloch, Paul Mein, Gerry Miller, Paul Sutherland, Maureen Sutton,  and Susan Wallace. 

For free tickets please visit our Eventbrite page http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/pimento-poets-tickets-18324328560 or call The Collection on  01522 782040   


Teas and coffees provided  

Free Event.

All welcome.