Michael Calum Jacques

Michael Calum Jacques Poems

I


Welcome glimpses of day first peep over the hill,
...

Summer,1967

Perhaps there was a hole in my shoe,
There were flowers in the rain, in San Franciscan hairlines, too.
...

When Winter Comes, the Robin Comes


When Winter Comes, the Robin Comes,
...

Sunset at Marbery Mere, Cheshire

All is too noisy, rowdy and blue,
Except that quiet I glean from you;
...

The Best Poem Of Michael Calum Jacques

Railway Town

I


Welcome glimpses of day first peep over the hill,
To spot the field as, damp with dew,
The vole who danced to the nightingale's trill,
Does yawn and stretch, then noses through
Tall blades of grass;
So cold, so sharp.


Golden leaves stutter "Fall", branches bare thus accord,
That Autumn time is now set fast.
So nuts and seeds by the squirrel are stored,
Who nimbly mounts the bark of ash,
To pause and glance...
At distant spires.


On the river so nonchalant, biding their time,
Calm swans do guide their cygnets' path.
Close by, the shrew scurries home from that line,
Where steaming roars and fiery wrath
Do close up close
On him and hiss!



II


Bowing poplars soon usher this "president" by,
Were sour hued stones can raise no joy.
The screeching brakes in the Citadel cry,
And stoker, grey, and driver, blue,
Plod on to find
The tea-maid fine.


In this station of sandstone and elegant grime,
The poundings rumble anxious hearts,
Who long for loved ones or, losing them, pine,
For they may never greet that part
Of life again,
At home, they fear.


Near the wheezing and rasping, the clatter of hooves,
(That gathered in broad courtyard square) ,
Had clip-clops clocked by a face up above,
Which, from its tower, beams out a glare,
Past hands too slow
To hide its cheek.



III


Jolly ‘merrie', the duo of turrets we view,
Bid cautious greetings to the foe,
Reminding any who may go astray,
That straight to jury they must go:
When found and caught,
Then fined in Court.


Pretty fountain or statue or flower or sod,
Accompany all who take their rest,
To watch those ‘others', so hurried and hot,
Attempt to beat the clock, beset
With ‘flu they fly,
And steam with cold.

On the Street of the nation, high buildings entrance.
Both restaurant and hotel clad,
It blossoms into a buzzing expanse;
That Place at which the heart's a Cross,
As Town Hall, quaint,
Dear time recalls.




IV


You remember it well, do you not, sad old town?
It hurts, it must, oh ay, it ought:
That time, your prime, has now passed, and you frown,
As you perceive what new is wrought
Upon your streets,
Before your eyes.


In this Place there was seen regal train, at a time
When sirs and wives would come to trade.
In rain, in shine, a fair deal they would find,
On market stalls with goods well laid
To tempt those sirs
To treat their wives.


With a bell so resounding it rippled the calm,
Which lay upon the town asleep.
So morning broke with a ‘Cling' and a ‘Clang';
To folk, who broke with clinging sheets,
The herald cried,
So he was well.



V


He dismounts does the squire, from the brougham to ground,
His manly sighs consume dawn's air.
Of stately mould, quite at home with the hounds,
This man looks well, with better fare
Than his poor maid
Or her poor man.


By a transport more humble than that of her lord's,
She's made her way to seek her wares,
Pallid and slight, with dress floral but worn,
This girl is sad, her plight far worse
Than her rich sir's,
Or his good wife's.


For the proud lady flaunts all her graces and airs;
Through all she shoves with stride so brave.
Her dress is silk and her bonnets and pearls
Help jerk the eyes of noble n' knave,
From their dear wives,
To some dear's wife.


VI


Now the parson meets ladies in tea rooms, so quaint,
To utter one more "Did you know..?
And stress regret that the splendid old gent,
Who passed away a week ago,
Is no more seen...
Unlike his son.


Out of doors linger warm scents of baking, so fresh,
The air is cursed by beggar, vexed,
Who learns that brats, though deprived of his years,
Can yet afford to relish cakes,
Then shed some crumbs
Which plump rooks scoff.


Scarper they as stout publican unbolts oak doors,
Through which soon pass those men who toil
In field, in workhouse at devilish chores,
For gents whose shoes are never soiled,
Nor shirt cuffs dark
From soot or sweat.



VII


Well bespoke men are patrons of three fine hotels,
Where chandelier and pillar pride
Palatial rooms of aroma and taste,
And one, hard by the station's side
Gives Queen her rest
On journey north.


When the doctor discusses his cases with judge,
Slow prudent nod, of due reserve,
Bears witness to an agreement of sorts,
On central points, as waiters serve
Right healthy meals,
With bread and wine.


At another, the bishop who dines with a king,
Just might survey the town hall square,
Foe solemn mayor news of menace does bring.
So local folk seek comfort where
Peace may be found,
Round off the square.



VIII


In its ground so pristine and with precincts sedate,
There stands the sacred abbey, bold.
Gargoyles poke fun, they who, strangely ornate,
Alone offend the hallowed soul,
Who looks to find
A fiend who looks.


Chilling senses of spaciousness haunt her wide aisles,
Beneath great windows' spectral light:
Glass, stained by saints, allows carving and arch
To nurture tranquil thoughts which bide
Amidst the ills
Of inner downs.


Ancient priory, tired, stares down with a sigh,
On restless crypt's still leaping vaults.
The gateway's cove bids farewell from on high,
And frames a "Cute" and narrow mall,
From where descend
The decent few.



IX


Precious relics sleep tight in their museum home,
Yet mourn those troubled childhoods spent,
By gate, by moat, below rampart and walls,
Which all the city did defend:
With sword and gun
They saw foes ‘gone'.


In the loom of the castle, the park, well at ease,
Sees love-bound pairs waltz round their rings.
Whilst veterans slumber through Autumn's cool breeze,
They drift back to their fragrant Spring,
Though youthful dreams
Bring cloudy eyes.


Once the evergreen gardener has clobbered poor mole,
Each petal lulls his seasoned touch,
And maidens, fresh from their riverside stroll,
Soon decorate those twisty nooks,
Which bend their path
Straight back to town.



X


With a "Thud" of sad triumph all coach doors are slammed,
Dull skies secure the close of day,
As Hardwicke hauls hefty carriages home,
On silver rails, to wend his way
Near hedge and field,
Where fire draws fear.


Yet the sway of the bush is so lazy and slight,
Once into dusk the train has roared.
Our shrew, now prey to the owl of the night,
Does comb his fur against the stalks
Of weeping shrubs,
In fading day.


Damp and darkened, the green of this quivering turf
Will coax another lunar smile.
Whilst far off bells sound maternal concern,
Dim silhouette and shadow wile
Away dark hours...
And grasp for light.

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