A Love Limerick
06 Monday Apr 2015
06 Monday Apr 2015
05 Sunday Apr 2015
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alex Carr-Malcolm poetry, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, napowrimo, NaPoWriMo15, nature, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, writing, Yorkshire poet
sun is dawning
and a new day forming
I see the brightness in the sky
let me hope this morning glory
swiftly brings me to my lover’s side
© Morning Glory 05.04.15
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
Photo Credit: Pinterest http://www.hear2heal.com/whats-the-story-fine-art-photograph-morning-glory-sindi-short-p-3606.html
04 Saturday Apr 2015
Posted in Grief, Heartbreak, Longing & Waiting, NaPoWriMo, Poetry
02 Thursday Apr 2015
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alex Carr-Malcolm poetry, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, Buddhism, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, writing, Yorkshire poet
Meditation
In a grove, a daisy grows,
against all odds, between the crags,
in harshest winds, its body bends,
and in sun’s rays, its beauty plays.
Just like this, our heart should kiss,
sublime compassion, on the cushion,
let our mind dance with divine
integration through meditation.
© Meditation 02.04.15
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
Picture Credit: https://uk.pinterest.com/Harmonysdream/simply-beautiful/
02 Monday Mar 2015
Posted in Found Poetry, Poetry
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, Archetypes, Bluebeard, Found Poetry, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, Yorkshire poet
Picture credit: “The Last Door of Bluebeard” by David et Myrtille
Bluebeard’s Folly
All women, watching, waiting;
Men, the ancient foe,
Bluebeardian force,
without conscious origin,
failed magician,
archetypal shard,
break the rules of Death,
as Lucifer dared to venture beyond,
to contravene nature.
In them, desire,
loftier than Life and Death,
loneliness washes over him.
© Bluebeard’s Folly 2014
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
taken from page 41 – Women Who Run With the Wolves
by Clarissa Pinkola Estes
22 Thursday Jan 2015
Posted in Awards, Poetry, Poetry readings / Events, Publications
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm Homecoming, Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, Geese, Homecoming, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, Yorkshire poet
I am so delighted to have won second place in Dagda Publishing’s Homecoming competition.
The write up is spot on too!
I wrote this poem whilst on retreat. Every morning, whilst meditating, the geese would fly off to a nearby lake, and in the evenings I would hear them returning back to their roost. The sight and sound of them was magical and primal.
Towards the end of the retreat I started to think about the journey home. Myself and friends heading back home to Yorkshire, (the North), full of hope, expectation and viewing the world with new eyes.
You can see the full poem by clicking the link below –
Thank you very much to Dagda Publishing for awarding me second place, I am thrilled and giddy! Please take a moment to check out their page as they do showcase some great writers and poets regularly on their site.
Photo credit: Found on thevintaquarian.com Pinterest
22 Saturday Nov 2014
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alex Carr-Malcolm Threnody, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, death, grief, memories, memory, poetry, Threnody, UK poet, Uk poetry, writing, Yorkshire poet
Do not grieve when I am gone,
I would not want it so.
Plant both feet firm in life’s joy,
and let my spirit go.
Take Mother Earth and dance with her,
and pass the day with Father Time,
for when you hear the linnet sing,
Know that it comes from my beating heart.
When you see the cherry blossom,
confetti falling at your feet,
Know that I celebrate your life,
in each and every way.
When you see the warm spring showers,
or harshest winter rains,
know that they are my tears of joy,
for your each and every day.
When you feel the summer’s breeze,
or brave a storm wind night
Listen out!
For I may call your name,
to remind you I’m about.
© Threnody 09.10.14
By Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
Picture credit: Torfi007 Pixabay
01 Saturday Nov 2014
Posted in Daily life, Death, Poetry
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm Lily, housework, Lily, love, Mother, mundanity, pain, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, writing, Yorkshire poet
I kick the dishwasher door shut
with my right foot.
Slam the mugs into their rightful place
without a backward glance,
click the washer onto spin.
Will it never end?
Then…
pulled up short,
a though occurs;
one day there will be no pots to wash,
no clothes to be done,
for you will be gone.
I fondly caress your fleece
slung carelessly across the chair,
and remove your work bag from the table –
to reveal the lily head, squashed,
beheaded, and hidden,
under mundanity
of housework.
© Lily 09.10.2014
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
Photo Credit: JamesDeMers Pixabay
25 Saturday Oct 2014
Posted in Childhood Memories, Poetry
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm Heirloom, Chesterfield market, Grandma, Heirloom, loss, love, memories, poetry, pottery, purple vase, UK poet, Uk poetry, Yorkshire poet
There it sat, in all its hideous glory,
a bulbous, iridescent, purple pimple,
with burnished orange tongues licking,
lasciviously savouring the purpleness.
It was a product of the swinging sixties,
and T. Rex glam rock seventies.
An affront to pottery, a frivolous folly;
a vase of distinction, all in the worst possible taste.
Not Spode, Wedgewood or even Pearsons,
She bought it from the market,
proudly placed on top of the mdf bookcase
with glass sliding doors.
They laughed, teased, insulted
the garish, gaudy, clay monstrosity.
Moved from shelf to side, hidden,
it was always restored to centre stage.
Too overpowering to hold delicate blooms,
too selfish, not wanting to be outshone,
it beamed and blinked on the mantle,
in the flickering light of the TV.
House move to house move it survived,
always her pride – in the room left for best,
until she died,
then wrapped in yesterday’s old yellow news;
locked away, denied, a taboo.
One day – somehow, remembered fondly,
revived, the story of Grandma’s vase,
unlocked, unpacked, grieving done, decades gone,
it sees the light of day, and has its place in the sun.
Handed to me, a keepsake, a memory,
an heirloom from Chesterfield market,
it now sits comfortably – retro;
proudly wearing its purple and orange coat,
a model of perfection – ahead of its time.
© Heirloom 06.10.2014
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
01 Friday Aug 2014
Tags
Alex Carr-Malcolm poet, Alexandra Carr-Malcolm, camping, humour, poetry, UK poet, Uk poetry, Yorkshire poet
Here’s a silly one I wrote a couple of years ago – and guess what – we are going back to Devon…. in a Chalet! Should be a fun week as hubby and I are both ill, eldest son is not happy as there is no wifi connection, so in essence I am ruining his social life and love life!! Only my youngest is up for this trip! Hopefully it may inspire a few more poems! See you all in a week!!
I’m back from Devon,
I really am!
We stayed in a tent –
not a caravan!
They said it’d be cold,
I didn’t believe ‘em,
now I want to go home,
to my central heating.
The tent was fun,
it really was!
I really enjoyed it,
despite the frost.
The night was long,
we had power cuts;
we couldn’t do owt,
it drove us nuts!
The rain lashed down,
and the winds were a fright.
We sat and played Black Jack
on a cold, dark camp site.
I hated the night time,
I really did!
It was so flippin’ noisy,
sleep? – God forbid!
For hours at a time
the little ones whinged.
All the drunks they sang songs,
whilst the sober ones cringed.
Early morning was quiet.
No – I lied, it was not!
The babies would bawl
to get out of their cot.
The mud was fun
as we took down the tent;
the rain not so much,
and I started to vent!
A six hour trip
and now we are near.
Was it all worth it –
shall we do it next year?
© Camping Capers 2012
by Alexandra Carr-Malcolm
camping, tent (Photo credit: Wikipedia)”]