Welcome To Our Website

We are a friendly local poetry group that meets on

the third Sunday of each month to read our own

poetry, listen to others’ poetry and talk about poetry.

Meetings take place on the third Sunday afternoon of

the month starting at 2.00 o'clock and finishing at

approximately 5.15. In December we meet on the

second Sunday.

They are held in the library of Orley

Farm School, South Hill Avenue, Harrow, Middx.


The nearest tube station is South Harrow. There is no

access by car from the South Harrow end of South

Hill Avenue. Entrance to the library is by a door

round to the left of the building.


Fancy yourself as a poet?


Come and listen or read
your own verse. This local

poetry group started in 1992. Visitors £3.00.

For further details and before coming telephone

0208 864 3149.



Below we will be placing some of our latest verse as tasters.

Wednesday 22 September 2010

Musical Ages

When we first met and the radio broke
we’d go to your piano,
and search under the lid of the stool.
The music, written in dots,
I never understood,
but all the words made perfect sense
and we sang those good as gold songs,
wholesome as a white picket fence:
Clementine.
Tiperary
Home on the Range

But soon we were playing thick black vinyl
with jazz, Bach and the blues
on long players we mostly borrowed,
buying rock and roll on forty fives,
entranced by the scratchy pop bubble
and that hit parade you always followed:
54321
Please Please Me
For your Love

Cassettes with flimsy tape took off
but kept snapping:
you were the expert at repairs
spooling with a pencil to find the ends,
joining them up with pink nail varnish
that smelt of pears:
Harvest
Astral Weeks
Blood on the Tracks

The silver CD did for them both,
optical, you said,
nothing to cause friction.
On my own now, more numb than tense,
I dial up a swarm of new tunes
that fly through the air
and make a different sense:
Mercy
Rehab
Poker Face

Oh my darling, oh my darling
It’s a long way to go
Where seldom is heard a discouraging word:

where are you now?

Peter Keeble

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