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.

Sunday 11 September 2011

Skilled Worker

He spends his days peering
into charmless caverns
shining lamps into damp spaces.
Some may emanate sweetness
others odours redolent of decay
neglected tombs of joyful times.
Ranged in the wet warm darkness
rear up the standing rocks
deep-rooted white in rose-hued beds.
Some crags discoloured
cracked and fissured
teeter in amatanthine gloom.
His silvery instruments
flash and glint reflecting
movement of his twisting wrist.
He probes the noisome depths
casts jets of water, blasts of air.
An adamantine surface
pierced, a bridge in place,
a brace applied. He toils
unchallenged among cavities.
His wordless victim lies
supine and tense, fists clenched
the whole world contracted
to a white coat, a whining drill.

Sylvia Goodman

Holiday

The sun is a bowl
holding heat on my skin
like love,
soaking into my bones,
into my mood
like balm.

My knots unravel,
my pressures melt away.

I am butter, oozing.
I am apple pie,
peeled and baked and brown.

I have brought all of me
on holiday,
my toes, my tears, my ears,
the whole package
so we can each unwind.

This is meditation,
my mind not chasing plans,
past and future folded away,
just the glorious, sun-filled
present.


©Jane Upchurch
www.janeupchurch.co.uk

Wash My Sins Away

I'd warned her many times
one item, full wash, full spin
noise alone should have
been enough,
but now, banging for drum heaven
the machine's ghost itself departed.

Just Sunday left,
and from my wet window,
today's future looked stormy.
So I loaded the bath,
soap powder, hot water, and
a week's clothes,
hand-washed all, then tried to
wash the soap out, bugger.

As light bulbs go
this idea shone semi-dim
in a stupid kind of way
that had feasibility.
So Your Honour,
I was pegging out clothes
drenched through
in the height of a rain storm,
to rinse them, yes, rinse them.
when she came home
and said the wrong thing.

Jerry Pike

Homecoming

For years I've dreamed of coming home
to Cornwall, place where I was born.
Nowhere, I am both overcome
and quite at peace. those things foresworn
to live in cities, beautiful and wild,
delight and slot back into place
to that self I was as a child.
I know this sand, wind on my face,
the turquoise and the pewter moods
of this west country sea. Red earth alludes
to patchwork fields of memory.
Dear God, what fate caused me to stray?
Now here, how can I go away?

Dorothy Pope