Friday 8 December 2023

the narcissism of small differences





Here is a Christmassy photo of M.Magpie taken this time last year. 



As he has now flown the nest with his love - beware the host of the air (the fairy folk)- I doubt there'll be any more recent photos of him but I shall remember him like this in all his glory. He left me a few things to remind me of him though. When my printer broke for the third time and I took it to the repair shop they looked at me curiously when I said I expect a bird had put a dog biscuit down it. When I collected it the man solemnly handed me a tiny dog biscuit and suggested perhaps I closed the printer up completely when not in use.  He still looked at me curiously.
When I returned home I unexpectedly decided to do some spring cleaning and turning down my wall mounted anglepoise light shade was showered with nine further dog biscuits he'd cached in the light. I'm still finding toast crusts in books and this morning found one tucked inside a card on the mantle piece. I do miss him.


However at the moment I am caring for a family of hedgehogs. They are too small to hibernate outside so they have the run of the stable. I weigh them every now and then - they must be 500gms to survive a hibernation and they are scoffing back the food. I feel like a waitress as I carry a tray of little bowls of cat food every morning to them across the mud. No one leaves me a tip.
I love this poem by the late Benjamin Zephaniah who has died tragically young - a wonderful poet.


I am in luv wid
a hedgehog
I've never felt this way
before
I have luv fe dis
hedgehog
an every day I luv her
more an more
She lives by de shed
where weeds and roses
bed
An I just want de world to know
she makes me glow.

I am in love wid a
hedgehog
she's making me hair
stand on edge
so in luv wid dis
hedgehog
an her friends
who all live in de hedge
she visits me late
and eats off Danny's plate
but Danny's a cool tabby
cat
he leaves it at dat.

I am in luv wid a
hedgehog
she's gone away so I
must wait
but I do miss my
hedgehog
everytime she goes to
hibernate.



Here is Pocket holding forth on the narcissism of small differences. I've told him if he doesn't stop going on about it I'd tell him about The Great Cat Massacre. I told him to google it when he didn't believe me that in the 1730s in Paris there was a big massacre of cats.


He told me he had more important things to do and sat waiting for his agent to ring him. He also asked me if I was aware that in the beginning was the word. "Have you been reading Genesis?" I said. He scowled and told me Genesis was a rock band and how could he read that. I've learnt to ignore these things. He thinks he's very superior.
I had to admit to him that the more our relationship shared commonalities the more likely we were to engage in interpersonal feuds and mutual ridicule because of hypersensitivity to minor differences. He then argued that the differences weren't remotely minor rather more major.



Here is Scout who ignores most things except when it's meal times. It's been so cold in this house that I've been sitting in two hats, a coat and a scarf as well as ordinary clothes and occasionally lie like Scout near the fire.
Nancy thinks that Pocket is just a plump numpty who mumbles too much.
And Rocket wouldn't dare say anything rude about Pocket incase Pocket took his other eye out. He certainly didn't want to engage in any interpersonal feuds.
 

So dear Readers I will end this year of blogs wishing you all a very Merry Christmas and  Happy New Year with few interpersonal differences.



THE HOST OF THE AIR

by: William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)

    'DRISCOLL drove with a song
    The wild duck and the drake
    From the tall and the tufted reeds
    Of the drear Hart Lake.
     
    And he saw how the reeds grew dark
    At the coming of night-tide,
    And dreamed of the long dim hair
    Of Bridget his bride.
     
    He heard while he sang and dreamed
    A piper piping away,
    And never was piping so sad,
    And never was piping so gay.
     
    And he saw young men and young girls
    Who danced on a level place,
    And Bridget his bride among them,
    With a sad and a gay face.
     
    The dancers crowded about him
    And many a sweet thing said,
    And a young man brought him red wine
    And a young girl white bread.
     
    But Bridget drew him by the sleeve
    Away from the merry bands,
    To old men playing at cards
    With a twinkling of ancient hands.
     
    The bread and the wine had a doom,
    For these were the host of the air;
    He sat and played in a dream
    Of her long dim hair.
     
    He played with the merry old men
    And thought not of evil chance,
    Until one bore Bridget his bride
    Away from the merry dance.
     
    He bore her away in his arms,
    The handsomest young man there,
    And his neck and his breast and his arms
    Were drowned in her long dim hair.
     
    O'Driscoll scattered the cards
    And out of his dream awoke:
    Old men and young men and young girls
    Were gone like a drifting smoke;
     
    But he heard high up in the air
    A piper piping away,
    And never was piping so sad,
    And never was piping so gay.

Saturday 4 November 2023

the egg stone

 



My new book The Egg Stone has just been published. It's a departure for me and loosely based on an incident that happened to my grandfather in the war.




Old Charlie is the only person who is able to understand the words that Kip speaks. Misunderstood and judged, Kip's early life leaves him with only two treasures; a stone in the shape of an egg and a young magpie. At the turn of the Second World War, Kip and Charlie go on the run and find themselves in peril on the sea. The Egg Stone is a tale of friendship, superstition, human differences and prejudice.
Were all men the same - some hiding their true selves until they lost their common sense? What separates men like this from someone like me?
You can read the first chapter at the end of this blog and you can buy it from Amazon.


I couldn't have written the story without the help of M.Magpie who let me into the extraordinary world of these misunderstood birds.


Above is about the only picture I have of M.Magpie's new consort. Pictured here in her ivory tower - ie the poly tunnel. I think she must have whisked him away as for over a week he had disappeared. For a year and a half magpie visited me every day, coming into the house, chatting and stealing and prancing up and down the table nicking things when I wasn't looking and when he went I really missed him. I even missed the broken pots he knocked off the mantlepiece admiring himself in the mirror. I missed the paperwork he would strew across the floor. The way he came flying across the lawn when I called him and land chattering on my shoulder. I wouldn't even have minded the peck on the ear. Ever since he'd met up with his lady friend I knew he'd become a proper wild magpie - not one who half lived in the house or swing perilously on the bird feeder outside the kitchen window then seeing me fly onto the window sill and then sit on the taps. But for now he's back perhaps for a fond farewell.


I have been trying to write this story for a long time - originally thinking of a biography of my grandfather's life but then knowing I wanted it to be a novel with a boy who is judged for being different. One day I went to a Henry Moore exhibition of some of his drawings of Stone Henge. The man who was in charge of one of the rooms told me that as a boy Henry used to carry a stone from the beach in his pocket which he used to hold and draw from touch. "You should put that in one of your stories" he said. (my companion had told him I wrote books) 
And so I did.





Chapter 1

Charlie was the only one who understood the words that Kip spoke.

It was if he had fine tuning in his ears which could translate the boy’s sounds; a mixture of all the languages under the sun, all the cries of the birds, the barks and baying of the wolves, the hooting of owls, the songs of the whales. The growling of dogs.

He and Kip were about to leave Greenacres when someone started shouting in the room down the corridor. The shouting turned to howling and then the sound of someone throwing a piece of furniture at a door. Kip shrank back and covered his ears with his hands and Charlie shut and locked the door to Kip’s cell. Inside they waited. Several pairs of footsteps pounded along the corridor. They heard jangling as someone opened the other room and Charlie sighed with relief. He had stolen the key to Kip’s room and feared whoever was outside would notice it had gone.

After some shouting and more banging noises it quietened. The patient must have been jabbed with a tranquilizer needle Charlie thought. Either that or smothered with a pillow.

Eventually they heard the door being locked. Charlie and Kip waited for the footsteps to return along the corridor but instead they came towards them.

“They’re trying all the doors,” Charlie whispered to Kit putting his finger to his lips. “Don’t make a sound.”

Someone stopped outside their room. The handle gently turned. Charlie let out a quiet breath, relieved that he’d locked the door from the inside and looked around the room for somewhere to hide if whoever it was came in. Just as he was considering squeezing under the bed the footsteps retreated.

They waited a while then once out in the corridor they locked Kip’s room again and returned the bunch of keys.

“We’ll have to leave the back door as it is,” Charlie said to Kip as they stepped outside. “That’s the way I came in. Let’s assume the staff will just think they’d forgotten to lock it.” He looked over his shoulder “But with your room Kip I think we’ll be ok. These people shut you up for hours in a place like this don’t they – without even checking to see if you are O.K. as long as you don’t make a fuss.”

Kip nodded.

“It’s locked, left and misunderstood isn’t it? Whoever had been in the other room must have been needing severe attention and known that the only way to get it was to smash the furniture.”

They were just out on the drive when they saw the flash of a light inside the building.

“Hurry,” said Charlie “– looks as if whoever it is might have discovered you missing after all.”

As he spoke a cloud passed over the moon throwing them into semi-darkness. He grabbed hold of Kip’s arm and they walked as fast as they could up the drive. Turning his head he caught sight of a powerful torch by the kitchen entrance and heard voices as the light scanned the drive in a large arc.

“We’re going to have to run Kip.”

Charlie grabbed his hand and Kip started to run but his feet seemed paralysed and he tripped and fell onto the ground.

They’re not working Kip panted.

In spite of his age, Charlie was still a strong man and scooped Kip up, throwing him over his shoulder as if he were a sack of corn. He could tell they’d been seen as the arc of light fell just behind him. As he ran he prayed the car would start – it had always been tricky. Sometimes not catching till the third or fourth try. They were nearly there when he heard them gaining ground. Charlie knew he couldn’t get them inthe car and the camouflage removed and perhaps several attempts to start it before they were reached. They veered off into the trees and threw themselves down in the undergrowth. The men’s voices grew louder.

Kip lifted his head and Charlie put his finger to his lips again.

They heard footsteps nearby and saw the beam of the torch sweeping around them and then shining up in the trees.

Do they think we’re birds? Charlie thought.

The land under the trees was ill kempt and one of the men tripped on a bramble which twisted around his boot, causing the torch to fly out of his hand as he crashed down.He swore loudly. The torch landed a few yards short of the hidden figures.

They held their breath.The man scrambled to his feet and grabbing the torch, turned it to shine into the face of his colleague.

“Watch where you tread,” he ordered.

The men moved around and then right behind where Charlie and Kip were hiding a twig snapped. Another twig snapped then there was rustling as something crept closer.

They lay still in the leaf mould waiting for the hands to grab them and haul them to their feet.

A fox stopped a few yards from them and sniffed the air.

“Someone must have picked them up,” Charlie heard a voice say. “We’d better ring the police.”

“He’s just a boy isn’t he? He can’t have got far.”

“Still a murderer though. Did that woman in didn’t he? And someone helped him escape.”

Charlie felt a chill run down his spine. A murderer. Is that what they thought of Kip? Of course they would. There was a dead woman and there was Kip and he couldn’t tell them what had happened.

The man with the torch swept the undergrowth with the beam and picked up the russet face of the fox.

“Fox!” he shouted. “They can’t be here. That fox would not have hung around if they’d hidden in there. Come on let’s make that call.”

Charlie waited until the men had gone back to the building and pulling Kip up, bundled him into the car. It started straight away and he drove with his lights off back up the drive and onto the road.



Thursday 12 October 2023

wherefore art thou

 




Mrs Magpie has written a poem on my lap top



                                                  M/////////ccx!\\\\\\§§k

                                                  [[[[[[[[[[[bxxxxx==

                                                  ggghggggggggg///////111

A very thought provoking piece with an experimental line structure.

(Pocket later wrote one himself that appeared to be about his existential angst and lack of food and this too had an interesting and modern line structure.)


I used to think Mrs Magpie was a bit of a housewife - her white front feathers look very much like an apron and she goes about the house picking up errant crumbs in her beak and tidying away pens and bits of paper. Here she is looking smug on the Smeg. But now she seems to have taken a wife herself.

A few weeks back at around 6.40 in the evening I looked out and saw she/he had been joined on the little table in the garden by another magpie. And every evening since they sit together in the apple tree where they spend the night.

The other magpie is very nervous and flies off as soon as she sees me though I can't help thinking she was the one I raised this year. I've no idea where she goes in the day but she flies to the table at 6.40 regular as clockwork and they canoodle in the apple tree. Sadly it's always so dark I can't photograph them together but I can hear the response from passers by Ah two for joy.

Having lived with one for sorrow for over  a year that is a blessing I suppose.

Now I can see my magpie with another I notice M.Magpie is much bigger and therefore more than likely a male though I'll probably still refer to him as Mrs Magpie. He may be speed dating but it seems his consort is the same one and I'm waiting for him to steal one of my rings as an engagement present. If they set up home together their nest will be made of pens.

On one occasion I went out before dark and she flew off. M.Magpie landed crossly on my shoulder, told me off with a loud squawk and pecked my ear. I apologised.

If on the odd occasion she hasn't turned up by 6.40 we both wait anxiously for her - me hidden upstairs and looking out the bathroom window and MM sitting on the roof of the pink tower surveying the scene and calling in a voice I haven't heard before 

wherefore art thou .......?


Here he/she is helping with the tomato harvest before he/she started writing poetry and waiting for her to turn up.


Pocket meanwhile is fed up with all this magpie palava and said he was going to write a book of jokes, Really? I query. Is that possible? I can't remember you ever saying anything funny. He stared at me. Too much possibility leads to the mad house. Ah you've been reading Kirkegaard I say but he ignores me.

How do you tell the difference between a weasel and a stoat he asks.

I shrug, as far as I know he's never brought either into the house.

Well a weasel is weasily recognised but a stoat is stoatally different.

I wished him luck with his book.



Meanwhile Rocket said he hadn't been fed since Christmas and would have to eat this cushion. After that if anyone comes to the gate he would meet, greet and eat them.


Dogs



We went for a walk
together you and I
you and your stick carrier
and me with my ball fetcher.
They jumped with each other.
Your growler howler, rabbit chaser
deer bringer downer
fox poo roller, garden digger
ran.
My tail wagger, food gobbler, cake stealer
sofa surfer, cushion napper
wet noser
came when called.
Yours disappeared 
into the landscape.




L.Coggin

Thursday 7 September 2023

theatre of insects

 


Pocket, tired of watching the theatre of insects that came with the cut flowers in the house has announced he's writing a Captive Narrative.


What do you mean? I ask You were hardly captured by pirates or Native Americans were you? He washes a paw and tells me by being a Bengal cat he was taken from his own tribe and made to live with humans. You're only one quarter Bengal I say to him but he says that's not the point - he's still a hybrid of the Asian leopard cat and as a breed, he adds, is smart, energetic and playful. I'm definitely being held against my will he says and I'm changing my name to Pockethontas. I tell him he can go any time he wants but he said he was going to take a nap as being smart, energetic and playful was tiring. He might go after tea and might be back for breakfast.

I shall weep crocodile tears Rocket says and Pocket adds he'll weep turtle tears.

"Watch out the butterflies in our theatre of insects don't lick the salt as a source of sodium from them "I tell him. Pocket scowls. I know that. I used to live in the Amazon when I was taken from my tribe. Rocket points out that Asian leopard cats come from Asia not the Amazon. 

Oh Amazon Shmamazon Pocket replies shutting his eyes.

We don't have a flea circus in our theatre of insects as we treat our pets with Frontline but I did once go to the Natural History Museum in Tring where there is a display of fleas dressed up as Mexicans. Apparently this was the pastime of Mexican nuns in Victorian times who unbelievably attached threads of clothing onto fleas with adhesive. When you look through a magnifying glass you can see they are perfectly dressed and even wear a hat.The flea circus's attached them to tiny chariots which they pulled as they hopped around the miniscule circus ring. I've never had much time for fleas but it can't have been nice to be glued to anything. I've told Pocket not to get any ideas. As a quarter Bengal cat full of energy, playfulness and smartness he has already given me a lecture on spiders, telling me that conkers in the fireplace do not keep them away but that they're not keen on chalk so if I didn't want any in the house why didn't I draw lines over the floor ? I told him I didn't mind spiders that much.

Rocket, who goes to the door every time I get up keeps telling me he hasn't done enough steps. I didn't know you had a Fitbit I say."I've discovered motivation that's fresh, fun and fashionable" he says. When I ask him where he keeps it he doesn't answer. Yes fresh, fun and fashionable he mumbles. I suspect he's just been reading the advertisement and I can't see any sign of one in his bedding nor strapped to his legs. It's just an excuse to go on more walks.


Here he is on holiday in Devon. He likes being on holiday - he doesn't have to bark at people or other dogs who are on his territory like he does at home. He surprisingly came into the water when we went swimming but only enough to get his paws wet. Then he stood anxiously on his hind legs to watch us as we swam away then ran up and down the beach telling people that his people were out there and he wasn't sure if we knew how to swim or even knew how to come back and could anyone help and go and rescue us?

Here is Mrs Magpie pleased with herself for opening a package all on her own without being asked. Apart from the usual stealing I've noticed she likes to re-arrange things. I think this must be a control thing. I've seen her tuck a sweet pea flower into the leaf of a zinnia. She also thinks flower pots look better scattered on the ground in the poly tunnel rather than in neat piles which is what I've done with them.

My favourite dahlia is at last in flower!  Earwigs like dahlias and I've notice one or two scurrying across the table before Pocket gets the idea he could harness them to a match box.

And dear Scout is no trouble at all. Here she is on her morning stroll across the harvested corn fields.

The green party members in my garden.

So although I told Pocket I didn't mind spiders you can see from my poem below there was a time when I did.


Entirely Spider.


It broods in the folds
of the nightdress-
huge, as if it wears an overcoat
- as dark as dreams.
I shudder and sleep in the other room
there is nothing sadder than
being single and having
to deal with a large bug.

Later, when life becomes
too short to dust
and I have found other fears
I keep good company with one.
Through the borrowed view 
of the bedpost
I watch her dance attendance
repair and tidy her beautiful web
nibbling at her trussed hors d'oeuvre
saving herself for the Big One
her Mr Right whom she devours
after a night of spinning passion
her just desert.

Curled like a cat
she fills the corner
her egg sac casting a vast shadow
across the ceiling
she ceases to scurry
instead she watches and waits
her web slack with time
and misuse.
Now as winter approaches she is ready
for her long descent.
She clings to her clever thread
my daughters screaming as she wearily
passes them
I cajole and re-ssure
I place her in the palm to prove a point
and now, close up
she seems much smaller than I thought.


Linda Coggin from Dog Days published by Zero Books.


Thursday 10 August 2023

lost words



 


                                 The list of lost things grows longer.





Unusually for me I made a cake the other day for which I needed 2oz of butter to make the almond topping. I diligently measured out the 2oz which was the exact amount of butter I had left. I turned my back for a moment and Mrs Magpie swooped in  nabbed the butter, flying off with it to either eat it, hide it or make a sandwich with it.


I was reminded also of the possibly apocryphal story of the spurned woman who so maddened by her partner's infidelity stuffed his curtain pole with prawns and popped the finials back on each end. As the days and weeks wore on the smell in his flat was so awful he was  forced to move out. Well Mrs Magpie raided a box of prawns I had left to de-frost in the kitchen and it felt a little like that. I found one in the fruit bowl, one tucked between a couple of dog towels, one in a flower pot. Fortunately I have no curtain poles but I'm surprised she didn't push one into my printer which she's done before with a dog biscuit.

Well of course that's what magpies are. Thieves. I don't know why she likes a pastry brush - but postcards? Perhaps she's sending them to friends with a wish you were here on them. And that's not all. We have a 'food' store which is an old Rajasthani painted cupboard with iron bars down the front where packets of rice, sugar, nuts etc stand like prisoners waiting to be released. She has found a way to cling onto the bars and peck through to the packets - or peckets as she clearly thinks they are - so the kitchen floor is often scattered with rice like some newly wed bride has passed through on her way from the church. I think she is apex predator now. She can open a box of eggs and eat them which is something that Pocket can't yet do.

The other day I listened to a recording of the mournful cry of the solitary Kaua bird from Hawaii whose wife had died in a hurricane. When he went the species became extinct. I imagined people listening to a recording of Mrs Magpie and assuming this bird too had become extinct. What bird chatters, squeaks, coughs, splutters, roars and mimics the other birds in the garden? It was with great disappointment that I heard the cheerful song of Mrs Peggotty who has long been gone with the other jackdaws only to see it was Mrs Magpie trying to fool me.



Here is Rocket whippet racing. Basically it's a bunch of plastic bags pulled along on a battery operated wire. I haven't let him near my shopping since incase he associates my bags with the thrill of the chase.
He's not called Rocket for nothing.


Here he is resting after a busy morning with the plastic bags.

Below is a little run down on the cats.


This is Pocket yawning as I discuss the Narcissism of small differences. I guess he'd rather we were talking about Ponzi schemes, venture capitalism or Wim Hof.

Nancy is getting old now but still as vociferous as usual. She's either telling us the end of the world is nigh or that she really hasn't been fed since Christmas. It's National Cat today I tell her. She sighs. Life is a road that no one comes back down she says. She's like a little travelling alarm clock that goes nowhere.

   

Here is a lime green zinnia in transition. They've been one of the most successful cut flowers I've grown this year though these dahlias, roses and sweet peas have also been rather wonderful.



I seem to have reached an age where sometimes as I'm chatting away the name of someone or something escapes me. Talking to friends they too stop in mid sentence shaking their heads and squinting trying to remember. I wrote this poem on the strength of it.


Lost Words.


In mid sentence the name I want
becomes a greyhound sprinting
away from me
before I can trap it in my memory.
Have you met - er - 
but now it is half way down the track
tossing it up in the air, shaking it,
growling at it
sometimes leaving it alongside the name
of that actor
in that film - you know -
the one with the - er
it won the - er
and that plant
it's - it begins with a dee or an ess.

If you're going to become a dog couldn't you
be something slower
a small pug perhaps or
a three legged poodle
not a racing dog
as fast as the wind
disappearing over the horizon
with the name I want.

Occasionally when I call
the greyhound comes back
and drops the name at my feet
Ah Sisyrinchium I say and relax
becoming perhaps too complacent
and confident
in the fluidity of my sentences
till fleet of foot it grabs
something else
and plays with it, chasing it
down the street
hiding it behind bins
until I shake my head
and shrug my shoulders
I don't know I don't know
I can't remember.
Once in a while the greyhound picks up
someone else's lost word
and leaves mine festering by the side of the road
running away with polygonum, Esther and 
Manchester-by-the-Sea.


Linda Coggin.

















Thursday 13 July 2023

the sleep of reason

 


Mrs Magpie has now stolen so many things that I suspect she's set up a road side stall to sell off all my pens and silver teaspoons.


She loves roses (see above as do I) but her thieving has meant I have had to put all paperwork in a box with a secure fitting lid and to absolutely not leave any food around. Yesterday she flew off with half a block of parmesan cheese and today I saw her running across the floor with a cellophane wrapped bunch of basil in her beak. She has taken most of my cutlery. I think she is measuring out my life with coffee spoons. If cornered she squeaks then coughs (imitating me) then makes a loud clattering noise. She's become quite porky and for some reason has lost her beautiful long tail feathers so the over all effect is one of stubborn stubbyness.
A clattering is also the collective name for jackdaws of which I now seem to have quite a few.


This is Peggotty. Peggotty is a tiny fledgling jackdaw given to me by the wildlife hospital. A friend said he looked as if he was just back from the barbers and wasn't happy with the result.. But I've decided she may be a girl. Really I should have called Mrs Magpie Peggotty because the other day I saw she had unclipped and broken all the wooden pegs holding up my washing resulting in the towels and the broken pegs lying in a neat line on the ground. Admittedly they were cheap pegs and might not have broken so readily if I'd spent a bit more on them but even so.


The other jackdaws of which there are four like to fly back in to the poly tunnel as the door is now open in the belief that I'll feed them. When they see me coming they fly down from whichever tree they are in and squawking with excitement line up like pegs on the fence. Meanwhile the young raven is still in recovery. I have named him Stanley for now and greet him with a "Stanley I presume?" He looks at me with his huge black opal eyes and I stroke him with a feather which I think he likes.


Pocket tells me that from now on he wishes to be identified as a cat. "But you are a cat" I tell him. He asks me not to disturb him as he was having The Sleep of Reason. The Sleep of Reason produces Monsters I tell him. It's a Goya painting .Oy vey I hear him mumble and he twitches and jigs his paws as if he's in some Rotterdam techno dungeon.


Rocket on the other hand thought he'd write a book. It's set during the French Revolution he tells me about a street dog who rescues all the aristocrats' toy dogs that were wandering around the streets of Paris whilst their owners were losing their heads. "What are you going to call it?" I ask. The Scarlet Pupernell. He looks pleased with himself. "It starts - It was the best of times it was the worst of times." I told him that had already been taken in The Tale of two Cities but he insisted his was The Tail of Two Cities. I told him it was a really good idea and perhaps I could write it for him. He looked at me in horror and told me I couldn't write it as I'm not a dog and these  days in the publishing world you can't write as someone if you are not them and it would involve sensitivity readers. "Are they dogs?" I ask. He assures me they are and he doesn't as a debut author want to be cancelled. Do you have a pen name? I asked. Baron Rockzy he replies and I may well need  a wig and lace cuffs to write in for authenticity.  I told him I'd look on the Pets at Home website.



Lillies in the house are now cunningly disguising the smell of wet dogs.

As there's been a lot about the Titanic recently I was drawn to Thomas Hardy's poem The Convergence of the Twain in which he contrasts the materialism of mankind with the beauty of Nature. 



In a solitude of the sea
deep from human vanity
and the Pride of Life that planned her, stilly couches
she.

Steel chambers, late the pyres
of her salamandrine fires,
cold currents thrid and turn to rhythmic tidal lyres.

over the mirrors meant
to glass the opulent
the sea-worms crawl - grotesque, slimed, dumb
indifferent.

Jewels in joy designed
to ravish the sensuous mind
lie lightless, all their sparkles bleared and black and
blind.

Dim moon-eyed fishes near
gaze at the gilded gear
and query "What does this vaingloriousness down
here?"

Well: while was fashioning
this creature of cleaving wing
The Immanent Will that stirs and urges everything

prepared a sinister mate
For her- -so gaily great -
A Shape of Ice, for the time far and dissociate.

and as the smart ship grew
In stature grace and hue
In shadowy silent distance grew the Iceberg too.

Alin they seemed to be
no mortal eye could see
the intimate welding of their later history.

or sign that they were bent
by paths coincident
on being anon twin halves of one august event

till the Spinner of Years
said "Now!" and each one hears
and consummation comes and jars two hemispheres.




Monday 12 June 2023

why is a raven like a writing desk


I came back from the wildlife hospital the other day with nine assorted corvids in the back of my car. All young birds not yet flying - four jackdaws who squabble with each other, an assortment of crows and rooks, the young magpie and a raven.



I adore all corvids but especially ravens - this one has a damaged wing and was going to be put down but given a reprieve at the last moment when they thought perhaps I might nurse it back to health. It is young but if it survives will grow to be bigger than Nancy our black cat. If frightened they pretend they are dead - lying very still and not moving. It seems to be all beak with the shiniest dark eyes like black opals. In the wild animals do not have time for boredom. Survival, self-defense, hiding, finding shelter and food all demand great watchfulness, rapid reactions, cunning and forward thinking which fills their days completely but in captivity the range of available activities is drastically reduced. Being well fed and well housed can have the effect of numbing their senses so it's important I return these birds to the wild as soon as possible.

Too much possibility leads to the mad house Rinpoche Pocket informs me. "You've read Kierkegaard have you? "I say but he ignores me and pretends that the young quail that Scout has found hiding under the television table was nothing to do with him. I rescue it and return it to the wild and Scout stands by the TV convinced it is still there. "Well there was a possibility you might have killed it" I tell Pocket.  Golden lads and girls all must as chimney sweepers come to dust, he replies looking pleased with himself. "Cymbeline?" I say "You've become a Shakespeare scholar now have you?" But after telling me that nothing in his life became him like leaving it he wandered off to check with Scout that I had really removed the quail from under the TV to me frowning and saying "Macbeth?"

Rocket on the other hand has clearly become a painter's muse. He tells me that posing for Lucien Freud (above) was most exhausting
but that Queen Victoria had allowed him to be seated though that in itself was exhausting.
Much more relaxing to be at home though this picture will not be appearing in the Wallace Collection's exhibition of dog paintings.


Mrs Magpie is seen here enjoying a lazy Saturday morning with Pocket and the papers. Her beak is put out of joint by the birds in the shade tunnel and by the fact I like to stare out of the kitchen window at the spotted woodpecker that swings on the bird feeder. I love watching the birds on this and it is a prime example of something good nearly always comes from something not so good. I used to have a hawthorn tree where the bird feeder is and my neighbour wished to cut it down as its roots interfered with one of his buildings. At first I was disappointed at its demise but if it had remained I'd never have bought the bird feeder which has given so much joy. (Also I planted a crab apple where the hawthorn had been and hope its roots don't interfere with the aforementioned building. )The belief that something good nearly always comes from something not so good was told to me by my grandfather. A relative of his who came from the same small Norfolk village had longed to start a new life in New York. He saved up £20 (a lot of money in those days) and set off to catch the boat wearing a smart new coat with brass buttons and a fancy waistcoat and a trunk made for him by the village carpenter. On the way in the coach he was given a drink, had all his money and belongings stolen and had to beg his way back home, his buttons all missing and his fancy waistcoat in threads. The boat left for New York without him but was lost at sea with all hands on board. So something good did happen for him out of something not so good.
Scout at the Sighthound meeting where they all chase each other round a large field. The sighthounds are now out of sight.


 Scratch and sniff this for the heady scent of roses - my garden is full of them all gloriously blooming.

Another poem below from what I might call the Dust Collection.