TYNESIDE POETS!

TYNESIDE POETS!

Wednesday 23 July 2014

Lines Written in a Country Alehouse



Here we behold the sons of Bacchus set,
To drown their sorrows in tumultous joys,
Where each his past misfortune does forget -
Where calls for silence but increase the noise.

Fumes potent rise, and each succeeding draught
Proclaims the growing goodness of the beer;
And Hodge rears his stentorian voice aloft -
For he in reasoning owns no compeer.

In Politics with foresight keen he dips -
To show their course his spacious hand extends;
Fates fall from off the rustic Nestor's lips,
And empires hang upon his fingers' ends.

With well-clenched fist he makes the table plead;
Half-thunderstruck the gaping rustics stare;
They all admire the wisdom in his head -
But the great wonder is, how it came there.

I like such rhetoric - for to me it shows
More than a world of flowery tropes could teach -
That e'en the English peasant feels and knows
The glorious privileges of thought and speech.


       Robert Gilchrist (1797-1844)

Saturday 19 July 2014

THE STORY OF STEAM: FOR GEORGE STEPHENSON 1781-1848



































‘How wonderfully has his invention facilitated the meeting of thousands of fond and happy lovers.’ (Thomas Summerside)

The story of steam,
history’s hiss 
through the passing
of engines and 
clapped-out hours.
The pereptual urge
to move
into the peace
of sleeping valleys;
iron dreams
and the nagging drive
of cruel ambition 
on the banks of the sliding Tyne.
You knew all this George,
how violent life is,
as, thoughtless in your youth, 
you stole a blackbird’s eggs,
developing an understanding
of mankind’s urge
to rip forests apart,
to make ways
through gardens and castles, 
for commerce
and selfishness to have their way.
That and the wonderful offshoots
like lovers
getting together
and children laughing
in cultural deserts.

Your broad Northumbrian tongue
echoed along rails,
barked orders
to force idle workers
to spark the engines
that scared the crows
and brought terror to horses and cattle
with the fiery blast of mechanical power.
Your ambition surged roughshod
over delicate flowers,
more interested in the mechanics of time 
and fixing watches
than the whispers that the clocks of dandelions
heard in the breeze.
Mister Practicality, 
though you knew that the human lot
ended up in vapour,
you still told the pitmen’s sons that the earth
was round,
taught algebra to the lads
in a curiosity shop
of working models,
self-acting planes
and perpetual motion machines.

In your litttle garden,
you grew gigantic leeks, astounding cabbages,
scarecrow ams to fly in the wind
and a sundial to record the ticks of days.
Hammering the flaming hours
into the rickety shape of Blucher,
you moved people along the way,
crafted the valves, the rods and cylinders
of life
into a breathing thing
that lolloped along,
careering like you
into a famous night.
It did not come without a price;
My Lord, they can’t imagine
how much you scraped along in the dirt,
the bursting blisters on your feet,
your hurting fingers as you began to write.
Wriggling out of the Militia,
you earned everything you got,
forced 
to suffer the deaths of wives and daughter
and the blinding of a father.
Weeping bitterly on the West Moor to Killingworth road,
thinking of leaving for America,
you got to your own station in the end.
Geordie,
with Ferguson’s ‘Astronomy’ in your hardy hands,
you gave us many a glorious smoke-filled day,
brought young lovers together on platforms
awash with the smell of smoke
and the sparks of hearts 
spreading lightning across the land. 





KEITH ARMSTRONG

from 'North Tyneside Steam', Northern Voices Community Projects, 2014

Wednesday 9 July 2014

NORTH TYNESIDE STEAM


















NORTH TYNESIDE STEAM

A celebration of the bicentenary of the steam locomotive Blucher, together with the story of its creator George Stephenson in North Tyneside and of steam railways in the area. 

COMPILED AND EDITED BY KEITH ARMSTRONG AND PETER DIXON FOR NORTH TYNESIDE COUNCIL

This new book from Northern Voices Community Projects, commissioned by North Tyneside Council, with the support of the Heritage Lottery Fund, has been published to mark the bicentenary of George Stephenson's steam locomotive Blucher.


Blucher was built by George Stephenson in Killingworth, North Tyneside in 1814 in the Colliery workshop behind Stephenson’s house, Dial Cottage. The engine was named after the Prussian general Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher who fought in the battle of Waterloo, helping to defeat Napoleon. It pulled coal trucks along the wagonway from Killingworth to the coal staithes at Wallsend. Blucher made Stephenson’s reputation and over the next five years he built 16 more locomotives (many of which were built by recycling Blucher’s parts) at Killingworth, some for the Colliery and some for the Duke of Portland’s wagonway between Kilmarnock and Troon, which improved on the earlier engine, and this led to him being commissioned to build the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, establishing him as an engine designer and laying the foundations for his major role in the development of railways. 

With historical documents and images, alongside poems, songs, stories, photographs and drawings by local people, the book is intended to ensure that the story of steam in North Tyneside is not forgotten.



Dr Keith Armstrong,
Peter Dixon,
Northern Voices Community Projects

Celebrate the 200th Anniversary of the
invention of the Blucher Steam Locomotive.

North Tyneside Steam - compiled & edited by Keith Armstrong & Peter Dixon:
Book Launch

at Killingworth Library, White Swan Centre, Killingworth

6pm on Friday 25th July 2014.

Includes readings of poems and short stories from
the book and music from The Sawdust Jacks, Tony Morris and Gary Miller. Also featuring Ann Sessoms on Northumbrian Pipes. 

Light refreshments available.


NORTH TYNESIDE STEAM:
HERITAGE OPEN DAYS EVENT

This new book from Northern Voices Community Projects, commissioned by North Tyneside Council, with the support of the Heritage Lottery Fund, has been published to mark the bicentenary of George Stephenson's steam locomotive Blucher and tells the story of its creator in Killingworth and North Tyneside and of steam railways in the area.
Contributors to the book will perform their poems, stories and songs introduced by the editor local poet Keith Armstrong with Ann Sessoms on Northumbrian Pipes. 

WHITE SWAN CENTRE CAFE, KILLINGWORTH, FRIDAY 12TH SEPTEMBER AT 11AM.

Tuesday 1 July 2014

THE POET WHO SUNG ON THE BANKS OF THE TYNE



Enter St John's Churchyard, near Newcastle Central railway station, and you will find towards the rear an inscribed monument which covers the grave of the pastoral poet John Cunningham (1729-1773).


St John's Churchyard was noted for its 'poets' corner'. Unfortunately, apart from John Cunningham their memorial stones are now missing. They include two contemporaries to Robert Gilchrist -  William Watson (1796 - 1840) whose many songs included 'Dance to the Daddy', and timber merchant and songwriter Thomas Thompson (1773-1816), who was a mentor to Robert. Gilchrist composed a sentimental eulogy to Thompson upon his death in 1816.

Gilchrist wrote a number of eulogies to Newcastle's poets and civic dignataries and a fine one to Cunningham was published in Robert's Poems of 1826. It reads: