Two poems by Dorothy Pope
Published in The Spectator May 2020.
a great achievement
Coronavirus Street
Only the early morning thief
quietly shovelling sand,
a midnight cheat
home from long drive,
med student and nurse
not volunteering
in the otherwise street
but the self-risked gifts
of food in the porch,
the faithful deliveries
of newspapers and fish
sustaining numbers
of phone calls, emails and post –
different play, same characters.
How Old
I am six and seventeen,
twenty-five and thirty-four,
and we all have to live
in this ugly, inconvenient house
but from upstairs,
you can see clear across
to Dartmoor
and the beaches beyond,
past the bomb damage
and the four old-fashioned schools.
In the foreground is the man
seated at his table in the window
reading the spread out
broadsheet version of The Times.