Patrick Osada
Poetry
 

POETRY

Readers looking at this website on a small screen or mobile phone:

 For the best experience, it is recommended that you hold  your device so that

 the screen can be viewed  HORIZONTALLY.


Here's a selection of my poems for JULY

I update this website at the start of each month with a fresh selection of my poetry.   

 

PLEASE VISIT   HOME  (click the HOME button) for my poetry news... and a special announcement.       

(The control button is usually situated at the BOTTOM right of the screen on portable devices)



















SUMMER  by Harry Epworth Allen   ( 1894 - 1958 )














                   




POPPY FIELDS  by Claude Monet ( 1840 - 1926 )


SNAPSHOTS


JULY
Driving the sticky surfaces of Summer,
with snapshot views of the Dashwood's hill;
curve and camber require attention,
glanced impressions of the parched brown fields.


Through the dusty screen July air shimmers :
distant copse turns blue mirage; here, beside
this sun scorched highroad, hedge-rowed willowherb
bows at my passing; magpies stroll the verge.


Undulating wheat with scarlet poppies,
evoking Monet by the Risborough road;
family (in lieu of parasolled ladies)
backpack the footpath through a sea of gold.


Caught in an eye blink, a memory captured :
footpathed family in the waist high corn;
flaxen haired child smiles above the wheat ears,
bobbing towards the distant hedged hawthorn.




 




 



THE KNACK

Looking across the net
he knew the way the kid would feel.
he had been there himself :
knowing no fear,
ebullient and self possessed —
hunger, ambition, arrogance
fuelled his success —
then he could sleep at night :
confident and best.

His time has come. His body aches.
The proud flame that drives him on
evaporates.
Clothes cling with sweat,
sweat stings his eyes —
trapped in a cauldron of heat and noise.

Over the net, the young boy’s
features change as he pictures there
faces of champions he’s played.
In silence he focuses his will.
Playing from memory —
of aces from the past —
he winds up, refreshed :
serving for the match.


FORCE of NATURE


Whoosh! Like a force of nature they arrive…
Starlings. This boisterous, squawking, noisy mob,
strutting, uncouth gang, intimidate all
cautious birds : dunnocks, chaffinch, secret wrens.


Spreading across the feeding site, they clear
spilt grain, steal perches from the smaller birds.
Clumsily they ride the feeder’s wild swing —
scattering seed on hooligans below,
stabbing at brave sparrows, bluetits, finches
whose presence threatens to disrupt the show.


Leaving as quickly as they came, this flock —
of-one-mind swarms a laden apple tree
to ruin near-ripe fruit with casual pecks.
Then off again, a ragged hurtling mass,
to pounce on fields, string power lines like beads.


At day’s close they rise as one : this wheeling,
darkling flock shape-shifts in a setting sun.
Across the land a ritual soon repeats :
sharing a common pulse they turn, turn again,
flocks swoop fields, skirt factories, circle streets
as they follow weird tracks through empty air —
invisible to all but these strange birds.


At old Bisham two golfers have to wait
as starlings drive the fairway of the eighth;
like swarming bees they funnel single file,
descend upon an ivy-covered trunk
to disappear completely — swallowed up…
Creating, from a tree and avian clan,
a trembling, cackling sight of the Green Man.









BOLD


From the field-edge, a tunnel through tall grass
is snaking round the rampant brambles’ reach,
passed willowherb and thistles six feet tall —
a local fox has used this track all year.


Emerging in our garden in dense shade,
below a canopy of hazel boughs,
he soft-foots through the ferns and onto grass.
Casually he lopes towards the house, stops


to drink from border’s hidden pool, then checks
below bird feeders for spilt seed and marks
his visit with a fetid scat. Turning,
he passes where we sit, close-by the house,


trots down the drive to vanish in the lane.
Amazed, we freeze and watch this fox go by —
we’d seen signs that he visits in the night,
but not mid-afternoon in hot July.




CONVOLVULUS


When first green bramble berries start to show
and early hedgerow flowers start to fade,
up roadside grasses twining bindweed grows —
widdershins – towards bright sunlight’s haze.


Soon hedges down the lane wear heart-shaped leaves —
every where’s a smother of white flowers —
bell-like, large, they congregate like thieves
to steal the light, ambitious to climb higher.


Unlike favoured cousin, Morning Glory
bindweed in your garden is a pain —
a tiny bit of root repeats the story,
enveloping your beds with weed again.


To keep your borders always looking fine,
at your peril, ignore, this creeping vine.




THE BUTTERFLY BUSH


Self-sown, on waste ground, in old masonry,
it’s found a toehold on old factory sites,
populates the ruins of stately homes.
Once a cultivar, it slipped away
to set up home beside the railway tracks,
on abandoned buildings, sprouts from broken paths.
Buddleia can outgrow some native plants,
seeds germinate on dry and hostile ground;
its panicles of tiny lilac flowers
are where the bees and butterflies are found.
And, at a time with species in decline,
when campaigns urge Save Butterflies and Bees
our government has found time to decide
that buddleia is no more than a weed….


DEFRA (Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs)
Has declared buddleia to be an “invasive alien species.”








REWILDING : WHITE STORKS


My Father talked of storks he saw
in Poland, when he was a child,
each village had its storks “next door”
as most of them weren’t in the wild —
Back then they said that, as a whole,
one in four storks World Wide’s a Pole!


I first saw storks in Portugal.
On chimney stacks and in tall trees
careless nests, built in a scrabble
of broken sticks, sway in the breeze
where nesting birds “clack” with their bills
to thank their mates for their fresh kills.


Yet, now to Sussex storks have come
and pairs are building nests at Knepp,
their breeding problems overcome
with Cotswold Wildlife’s best help… yet
in Wadebridge, Cornwall, more have hatched,
even Dagenham’s got a stork patch...


So, will the Knepp storks cross The Downs
to visit cousins up in Town?


25% of the Total Population of White Storks breed in Poland.
They are welcome in the countryside where they are believed
to bring good luck.
In England, White Storks were hunted to extinction in the 1400s.
Today, the White Stork is being reintroduced, repopulating several
areas in England.







VENEZUELA


APPLAUD and CRY


Across the internet and TV news
fresh views of surrounding devastation.
Cutting away, the camera zooms in
to close up shots of a very small boy,
dusty, pale crying — rescued from the rubble.
Lifted shoulder high by triumphant men,
he sobs for missing Mother, lost brother—
his life now set in an alien world.
And how this scene plays out time after time,
from natural disaster to war-torn city —
we cheer the rescue ...but weep tears for him.




ALL POEMS ON THIS WEBSITE ARE SUBJECT TO COPYRIGHT