This post is dedicated to Cliff who brought this poem to my mind this morning. I make no apology for bringing you yet another Poem from the great man himself John Betjeman.
A Bay In Anglesey
The sleepy sound of a tea-time tide
Slaps at the rocks the sun has dried,
Too lazy, almost, to sink and lift
Round low peninsulas pink with thrift.
The water, enlarging shells and sand,
Grows greener emerald out from land
And brown over shadowy shelves below
The waving forests of seaweed show.
Here at my feet in the short cliff grass
Are shells, dried bladderwrack, broken glass,
Pale blue squills and yellow rock roses.
The next low ridge that we climb discloses
One more field for the sheep to graze
While, scarcely seen on this hottest of days,
Far to the eastward, over there,
Snowdon rises in pearl-grey air.
Multiple lark-song, whispering bents,
The thymy, turfy and salty scents
And filling in, brimming in, sparkling and free
The sweet susurration of incoming sea.
April 25, 2006 at 6:40 pm
thanks BB. I forsee another spin-off blog on the horizon.
April 25, 2006 at 7:29 pm
Thats rather lovely…just dropped in from jane’s site…Hi!
April 25, 2006 at 10:05 pm
Cliff - I have enough on my hands at present thank you very much, I will think about World Domination tomorrow when I am sober…
moo - welcome to insanity, I enjoy reading your comments on Jane’s blog they are like a breath of fresh air in the mornings…
It is a rather lovely poem and is very evocative of the seaside and makes me rather homesick for Cornwall even though it is about a place in Wales…