Christmas Poem
Its late.
The sea is swilling, dully flat against the harbour wall
Even the clinking sail boat masts have lost enthusiasm
The drapes more flail than flap, the Christmas lights
In the morosely quiet marina, weak and helpless
Against the grey chill of winter.
People are huddled in the bars and restauraunts,
Groping their iphones like old aunties with sherry;
The leatherette banquettes, wrinkled and slick
From the wet and worn out traffic of seasonal shoppers
And in the multi-storey all is a-squeak with the whine of windscreen wipers
As the chill constantly drizzles down.
He waits.
You promised to come back, laughing loud, promised that you would call
Downstairs the children play on gameboys only half expecting,
That there will be hot food, the fire lit,
Or your verbosely happy persona, will re-appear
Against this cold, dark, sadness.
People pass by on the rain slicked street
Caught in the streetlight holding each other, like fools
Against the winds and time, serving to remind you once again,
That she promised, that it’s Christmas; love, peace, goodwill
Are all in short supply, un-stocked shelves in your local supermarket.
It’s late, you gather yourself up in the half-light by the window,
As the waves, thick with memory and hope, swell and fall
You’ll wait, a little longer.
© Juliet Brain, 2011
The Butts, Salisbury
Diving for Pearls
I’ve been diving for some years now,
Spending longer and longer
Submerged.
There is,
The strangest disconnection as I resurface
Watching the world above me approach
Distorted by the rippling weight of moon and gravity
A disagreement of perspectives,
Not healed by time.
The pearls become rarer, I go deeper
The water feels colder, the under world darker
The above and below less seperate.
I dive
for pearls.
Snow
I feel you
In my bones.
My feet ache
The air hangs heavy, grey.
Gently,
You kiss my cheeks
Floating, swirling, dancing.
Like a lover you steal swiftly past
And dazzle me.
I am haunted by your beauty
Stung by your frozen touch
Enchanted and at once afraid.
© J. Brain, 2010
Winters Bell
It rang,
unclear against the sound of traffic and dripping rooves
It rang out against the frost and frozen village lanes
Its repeating, skittering along the surface of the dulled stream
and continued to ring.
Winter’s bell
Not a peal but a call to listen, attend
And then it came
Gently blowing across the roads and paths
Snow, winter had arrived.
© JBrain, 2010




