TYNESIDE POETS!

TYNESIDE POETS!

Thursday, 18 June 2015

THE SUN ON DANBY GARDENS






The sun on Danby Gardens
smells of roast beef,
tastes of my youth.
The flying cinders of a steam train
spark in my dreams.
Across the old field,
a miner breaks his back
and lovers roll in the ditches,
off beaten tracks.
Off Bigges Main,
my grandad taps his stick,
reaches for the braille of long-dead strikes.
The nights
fair draw in
and I recall Joyce Esthella Antoinette Giles
and her legs that reached for miles,
tripping over the stiles 
in red high heels.
It was her and blonde Annie Walker
who took me in the stacks
and taught me how to read
the signs
that led inside their thighs.
Those Ravenswood girls
would dance into your life
and dance though all the snow drops
of those freezing winters,
in the playground of young scars.
And I remember freckled Pete
who taught me Jazz,
who pointed me to Charlie Parker
and the edgy bitterness of Brown Ale.
Mrs Todd next door
was forever sweeping
leaves along the garden path
her fallen husband loved to tread.
Such days:
the smoke of A4 Pacifics in the aftermath of war,
the trail of local history on the birthmarked street.
And I have loved you all my life
and will no doubt die in Danby Gardens
where all my poems were born,
just after midnight.


KEITH ARMSTRONG



Wednesday, 3 June 2015

AN INDELIBLE GAP


(for John Green)
 
Scissure in spit-splitted earth, heaped
Sod and soil and clay, until
This mundane boxed antithesis
Of birth lies beneath backfill.
 
May dashes along the hawthorn,
Dandelions button the field
With galaxies of garish suns
That must flourish and then yield
 
To time blowing by like the breeze,
Dispersing life while leaving
A flaccid stalk and lifeless head.
Soughing, as the gathered grieving
 
Cast other blooms, single roses
On to the wicker casket
Lowered through sod and soil and clay,
A parody Moses basket
 
In that deliberately chosen,
Unconsecrated ground. No
Pious words or promises
For one left lying below.
 
Age brings increasing absences,
Each an indelible gap
Through which we are all travellers
Travelling without a map.
 
And think how all too easily,
“Time drags!” is said with a sigh.
Then there comes the final moment
When a lifetime has sped by.
 
While those presently left behind,
Knowing too well what’s to come,
Stand in that terrible silence,
Stand in the wake, feeling numb.
 
This final reckoning of years,
A life, in passing, so brief,
Yet, a life of such significance,
Its passing’s worthy of grief.
 
Friends, these are now our dying days,
Where the uncharted route lies,
And we gather as we dwindle,
As we say our last goodbyes.
 
With a final bowing of heads
We do or don’t speak to God,
Then turn and leave as that cleft is
Filled by clay and soil and sod.



Dave Alton
 
 

Monday, 25 May 2015

DURHAM
























Cobbled webs of my thoughts
hang around your lanes.
A brass band nestles in my head,
cosy as a bed bug.
I’m reading from a balcony
poems of Revolution.
It’s Gala Day and the words are lost
in the coal dust of your lungs.

Your dark satanic brooding Gaol
throws a blanket over blankness:
a grim era of second hand visions
aches like a scab in a cell.
And rowing a punt up your Bishop’s arse
a shaft of sunlight on the river
strikes me only as true,
shining into the eyes of all the prisoners
swinging from Cathedral bells.

Old Durham Town, you imprison me
like a scream in a Salvation Army song,
release me soon:

someone 
get ready to hug me.



KEITH ARMSTRONG

Saturday, 9 May 2015

ANGELS PLAYING FOOTBALL!













































ANGELS PLAYING FOOTBALL

Some weeks before he died in 1988, the legendary Newcastle United footballer Jackie Milburn was sitting in his Ashington home with a grand-daughter on his knee. Outside, there was thunder and lightning, which frightened the wee girl: ‘What’s that noise?’, she asked her grandad anxiously. ‘Don’t worry’, ‘Wor Jackie’ replied, ‘It’s just the angels playing football.’
It was this incident which inspired the following poem, given added poignancy by the placing of an Alan Shearer shirt on the Gateshead Angel’s prodigious back by local fans before the 1998 F.A. Cup Final!



Sprinkle my ashes on St. James’s Park,
Fragments of goals on the grass.
Hear the Gallowgate roar in the dark.
All of my dreams came to pass.

Pass me my memories,
Pass me the days,
Pass me a ball and I’ll play:

Play with the angels,
Play on their wings,
Play in the thunder and lightning.

I leave you these goals in my will,
Snapshots of me on the run.
I leave you these pieces of skill,
Moments of me in the sun.

Pass me my memories,
Pass me the days,
Pass me a ball and I’ll play:

Play with the angels,
Play on their wings,
Play in the thunder and lightning.




                                                                               

Keith Armstrong

Wednesday, 8 April 2015

FIELD


Field - by Peter Zinovieff and Katrina Porteous

21 April 2015 - 22 April 2015, 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
One performance each day.
Location: Planetarium, Life Science Centre, Newcastle upon Tyne
Field - by Peter Zinovieff and Katrina Porteous
£5 per personDuration: about 1 hourBooking recommendedAges 12+

A journey in music and words in search of the Higgs.

In 2012 scientists at CERN announced the ground-breaking discovery of the Higgs Boson, the particle which completes the Standard Model of quantum theory. But what exactly is it? And what are its implications? Field is a new live performance of voice and computer, by composer and computer pioneer Peter Zinovieff and poet Katrina Porteous, exploring ‘the stuff we are made of’.
Written in immersive 5.1 surround-sound, Field alternates music with words-and-music, to visit worlds very different from our own. Its seven movements explore the quantum – worlds of exquisite control which allow for random behaviour governed by strict probabilistic principles.
The Higgs Field, named after Newcastle-born physicist Peter Higgs, pervades all space-time, and everything that exists depends upon it, since it gives elementary particles their mass. It exists as the result of a moment of spontaneous symmetry-breaking. Field visits and revisits that moment, exploring its theoretical implications, including super-symmetry and dark matter. Field will include a full dome visual display by Planetarium Supervisor Christopher Hudson. It will be introduced by Dr Tom Lancaster of Durham University Department of Physics. No knowledge of physics is required to enjoy Field.

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

VEITCH


































(in memory of Colin Campbell McKechnie Veitch, 1881- 1938)

‘One man that has a mind and knows it can always beat ten men who haven't and don't.’
George Bernard Shaw 

Football brain,
you thought with your feet,
treading the boards
in a dynamic theatre
of passing action.
A winning way,
love of the glorious day 
and a sense of history
from Heaton Park
to socialism.
Your story,
from the pulsing Tyne
to the Geordie trophy room,
keeps us hoping
on Gallowgate,
alive with dignity
and strong respect
for the ideal of community
and the black and white love
of fairness.
Battling away,
in a skilled midfield 
and in the stinking trenches,
you fought
for your troubled lilting city
and all of those 
who ever kicked a ball
in its intimate soulful avenues.


KEITH ARMSTRONG

Colin Veitch made a total of 322 appearances for Newcastle United, scoring 49 goals. He  captained the United side which won League Championships in 1905, 1907 and 1909, the FA Cup in 1910 and were FA Cup finalists in 1905, 1906, 1908 and 1911, and also represented England on 6 occasions. 

Heaton History Group and Chris Goulding successfully campaigned for a commemorative plaque to be displayed on Colin Veitch’s former home in Heaton, Newcastle. The unveiling took place on 25th September 2013.

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

TREVOR LEONARD - FROM 'THE BARDIC PROMISE'


































Egalitarian phrases
Socialist in pleasure


Glorify the council house


We are dressed in many yarns

A full embroidery






Many ways join the complete society
Apples are ready
The carpets are laden
Do we need education
I have doubts myself
The sorrows of learning are like fires
We always remember to keep away from
Ethical honesty is the only real learning matter
Paces of understanding are related to character
When we feel expressive
The wings of time bring us poetry
Since time immemorial a falsehood has been here
The echoes of language raw are all we need
The matters of skill are generated by learning in particular
Beauty is our worthwhile endeavour
The colours of emotion celebrate creation
Where does education lead us
On blowing temper trails
There are those who can and most of us can’t
In ships of celebrity they guide promises of future
The cousin of nature is expression
It values our wellbeing
Proves our memory
We are all created creatures
Juices of love make us generous






In spite of ourselves communal




A Tyne Affair

Sail on the water

Curving footpath climbs

Eye of pleasure

Fountain gardens appetite of evening
Westgate Road joins Clayton Street

Seaside bereft of charisma
Recipe of progress
Mast of Spanish City
Colourful commerce
Café cakes of Belgium

Botanic centre
Arresting arrangement
Matters of nature
Funfair on corner of bay

The sea is the soul of time
it wanders us perfectly
draining our soreness
swathed in melody




I treated myself to a present of self-importance
When I first believed
I was the Messiah
Consciously given to overwhelming gratitude
For changes of personality
I addressed Creator with personal significance
Feeling rewarded
It is subtle
How we arrange our status
Wedding forms of inferiority with magnanimous
By roads of knowing myself I come to now
Sense of language
Lives in everyone
Dour perceptions also
We breathe our personality from education mainly
Forming more or less a high opinion
My scroll of ability
Was negligible
Then it happened I became a genius with words
Or so it seemed
A long time ago





Selected by Dr Keith Armstrong



Trevor Leonard was born in 1944 in Benwell, Newcastle. He attended Cannon Street School at the age of 5 and then Ascham House in Gosforth followed by Pendower Commercial and John Marley Schools. He was articled to a solicitor for 5 years and began writing at the age of 22. He now lives in Jesmond.

Trevor with Keith Armstrong

























TREVOR


This is a special man
who spends his life entirely
searching for clues to all of it
outside the teeming box.
He rants from the obscure corners
where no one else dares,
rummages down lanes 
where most folk fear 
to walk,
looking for a special meaning,
a hint of a jewel 
in the pervasive rubbish.
A walk with him 
will lead you
into beautiful gardens,
alternative libraries
and abstract galleries.
His voice
is his own 
unique instrument,
dulcit in the sun
of blooming vineyards
and birdsong.
His thoughts
refresh
the universe
with their original
melodies.
Listen to him,
to the deepness
in his soul,
to the reverence
in his wise and seaching eyes.





KEITH ARMSTRONG