Anne Smith
I am Anne Smith, a graduate in English Language and Literature, which I taught throughout my career. I wrote poems in my adolescence but took it up again after my husband died from cancer in 2006. By that time I had retired, though I still keep busy with charities, education and the council. I sing in two choirs and also visit the theatre, my favourite theatre being the Globe on the South Bank.
I attend St Mary’s Catholic Church though I was brought up an Anglican; two of my family, a sister and a niece, are Anglican priests. So I am pretty ecumenical by temperament.
Poems: Lunatic and Loving
‘The lunatic, the lover and the poet
Are of imagination all compact’
– Shakespeare
‘I’m not mad,’ the lunaitc sid.
‘Hearing voices inside my head.
They’re made up of all that I’ve read;
I’ll listen to them till I’m dead.’
The lover to this: Nor am I.
It’s my passion that leads me to sigh,
And emotion so strong that I must cry
All that I feel to the sky.’
‘I stand between,’ says the poet.
I feel what you feel but don’t show it;
And when you hear voices, I know it.
This love tht you have, I’ll bestow it
On all those who read what I write,
Keeping my memory bright.’
– by Anne Smith
Shakespeare and the Globe
You strutted and fretted your hour,
Shakespeare, on a stage like this;
Knowing your actions you wrote for them.
Though they are gone your verse remains.
– by Anne Smith
Shakespeare’s Globe
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Bawdy, noisy, smelly, dirty –
Robustly vulgar – that must have been
The early Globe on rip roaring Bankside.
Now the South Bank is a centre…
– by Anne Smith
Sunt Lacrimae Rerum
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
With our sublunary nature we can only
Make the best of things, put a brave face on them.
The jester’s red and yellow…
– by Anne Smith
The Poet - Shakespeare
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The sculptor fights the ugly block
Of hard grey stone before him
Seeking the imprisoned shape.
Sleeves rolled up, sweat-streaked …
– by Anne Smith
Poetic Fantasy
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The Comic Muse knocked on my door.
Wearing a tutu over black leggings,
And a mediaeval liripipe.
She also had a black eye …
– by Anne Smith
Death of Tragic Hero
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Most men fear death:
Whatever hardships they’ve suffered
They do not want to die.
A minority …
– by Anne Smith
Not Only the Tragic Hero
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
We must also remember –
Not the villains, Iago, Edmund –
And not the victims either,
Desdemona, Cordelia …
– by Anne Smith
Poems, Poetry and Poets
Discussing the art and mystery
Of making poetry,
Sometimes when it is inconvenient,
And sometimes it doesn’t come at all.
– by Anne Smith
Question
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
If the poems of my youth were
Adolescent
Are these scribblings of my age then
Senescent …
– by Anne Smith
WYSIWYG
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I like poems which are surreal,
Existential, impressionist;
And poems without capital letters
Or the support of punctuation …
– by Anne Smith
Poet
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Leads a humdrum life, cooking,
Cleaning, shopping, gardening…
Suddenly a poem has you by the throat
Which you have to deal with, get it off you…
– by Anne Smith
Poetry is electric
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Poetry is electric: it tingles in the head
And crackles down the arm.
Words scamper to the page,
Jostle in line for the right place…
– by Anne Smith
Memories
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Little, sharp, unbidden,
Snapshots of memory
Come into the mind.
No photographs remain…
– by Anne Smith
Concentration...
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
As a meat stock cube
Encapsulates in little
The goodness of beef
So a poem may…
– by Anne Smith
Poems
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Poems are like, and yet unlike, crosswords.
They are puzzles which involve finding words
And putting them in the right places.
But whereas with crosswords you know…
– by Anne Smith
Language and reason
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Language and reason tie us to the earth;
In hackneyed phrases our desires congeal;
Accurate words have only worldly worth –
Meaning betrays the truth of what we feel…
– by Anne Smith
On not writing poems
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Beautiful, virginal, sheets
Of plain white paper await
Despoiling by pen or keyboard.
Multiple ravishments…
– by Anne Smith
Patchwork
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In my box I keep
Individual lines of verse
Which came to me once
But had to go away…
– by Anne Smith
The Poet loses her inspiration
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
One night in hot weather
The fan in the bedroom
Blew the sheets from the bed
And the thoughts from her head…
– by Anne Smith
I woke up in the night..
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I woke up in the night fizzing with poems
And had to put the light on.
Reaching for my pad and paper
I tried to capture what was in my head…
– by Anne Smith
The poet's dilemma
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In my head there lurked
The first two lines of a verse
And skulking close beside it
Two lines to close the verse…
– by Anne Smith
I Look for a poem
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I know which poem I want to find.
And as I look I feel a frisson
And hear a tiny chuckle.
From the corner of my eye…
– by Anne Smith
Haiku ambush
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
haiku pen me in
five seven five my mantra:
is there no escape?
– by Anne Smith
Triolet: On being asked to write a Sonnet
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
If nothing comes to mind
I want to write,
What verses can I find
If nothing comes to mind?…
– by Anne Smith
Triolet
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Love, swift as thought
Invaded my harsh heart and bound it fast.
As I still fought
Love, swift as thought…
– by Anne Smith
Poetic styles
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Terza Rima
Villanelle:
Writing these
Would be swell –
– by Anne Smith
Lit Crit
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I used to teach once, to the sixth form,
Literary Criticism.
What’s that, miss?…
– by Anne Smith
Advice on Prosody
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Poems do not have to rhyme
But if you do, to pass the time,
Pay heed to the rhythm too
To keep the structure straight and true…
– by Anne Smith
Modern Lexicography
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
While I’ve always maintained a close relationship
With my pen, I never got to first base with
The keyboard. My keyboard has a life of its own.
‘Many garts on your brithday!’ it writes…
– by Anne Smith
Thought Balloon
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Balloons float from my mind
In all colours
Drifting to white clouds
Quietly alight…
– by Anne Smith
Other Voices
We know the major characheters
In history and legend.
Imagining how their sidekicks tick
Adds interest to the tales.
– by Anne Smith
Deluge
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
‘Isn’t the weather appalling?
This could last for the rest of the month.’
“Longer than that’, thought Noah,
As he reached out for his saw…
– by Anne Smith
North Sea Passage: Vikings
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Under a grey and cloudy sky we follow the whale roads
Adventure seeking for younger sons we are
Far from rocky homesteads with no room for all…
– by Anne Smith
Octavius Caesar speaks
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
When we were young we all looked up to
The grown up Antony, Caesar’s right hand man,
Commander of the left wing
At the battle of Pharsalus..
– by Anne Smith
Helen
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Old men sat in the sun on the walls of Troy
Oblivious of most of what went on around them,
Till Helen walked by them teasing the senses…
– by Anne Smith
Procession: Athens
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
With faces like flowers the grave-eyed girls
Stamp the beaten earth with ritual feet,
Skirts closed like pleated petals.
Flutes silver the …
– by Anne Smith
Good King Wenceslas:
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The peasant speaks
I thought at first
That the story was all about me.
After all. I was the reason…
– by Anne Smith
Jongleur
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
A legendary tale
I cannot read or write.
I have no Latin.
I do not buy or sell…
– by Anne Smith
Stately Home Owner speaks:
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
For a thousand years they lived here
In this house and the earlier ones.
Lined up along the walls, they are still here…
– by Anne Smith
Joseph speaks
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
After the Epiphany:
So, they came from Jerusalem,
These strange exotic people
Speaking in other tongues…
– by Anne Smith
Dutiful Son
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I’ll ring my mother today. Just to keep in touch.
You know- poor old thing, living alone now,
No one to talk to, putting a brave face on it…
– by Anne Smith
End Game
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
And when she awoke
It was to the sound
Of voices, young but grownup,
Chatting somewhere nearby…
– by Anne Smith
Gang Member
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Inside my head I am angry,
Always angry, but not bad.
I’ve no one that cares for me
No one who thinks I’m special…
– by Anne Smith
Earthquake
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
After Haiti
I am buried under my house.
The ground shook and groaned
before the house fell down.
– by Anne Smith
Peter
Soul mates, best friends,
Often disagreeing,
But bound together all our days,
All the life we shared.
– by Anne Smith
I am alone
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I am alone but you are in my heart;
We are apart and though for ever one
I am alone.
– by Anne Smith
Sonnet for Peter
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Tonight I’m at your deathbed once again
Watching you lie unnaturally still,
Eyes closed, not moving, suffering no pain…
– by Anne Smith
I woke today weeping
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I woke today weeping
For as I was sleeping
Your form in my dreaming…
– by Anne Smith
Crossing the Bar: Bae Ceredigion
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In the grey sea a small white fishing smack
Heads for the horizon, crossing the bar…
– by Anne Smith
Mourning
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Mourning is raw
Sweeping over arid plains
In a north-east wind…
– by Anne Smith
Unlike Queen Victoria
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I see no reason to go into black
To show the world I was a loving wife
Though dedicated to her public duty…
– by Anne Smith
Not changing, enduring
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I am so far out at sea
I could use shape-shifter
As seal or dolphin.
But I choose instead…
– by Anne Smith
Jetsam
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Above the high tideline
Stranded, I lie
Far away from
The countless murmurings…
– by Anne Smith
I drift alone...
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I drift alone upon uncharted seas,
Sails flapping, I am taken all aback
And prey to adverse currents, winds and fog…
– by Anne Smith
I think of you
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I think of you as trees begin to change;
When one great leaf, more golden than the rest,
Spirals to earth past traceries of black
– by Anne Smith
No one is truly dead
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
No one is truly dead
While they live in the memory.
In the mind they throng,
The not dead,
– by Anne Smith
Elegy
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Without you
The world is monochrome
Unstable, misshapen…
– by Anne Smith
Dream
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
On this side of the river
I am comfortable
Knowing where I am
Whom I shall see…
– by Anne Smith
The corners of your mouth…
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The corners of your mouth
Turned down in repose
But when you were happy rose
In a delighted curve.
– by Anne Smith
Months and Days and Nights
Year follows year, season follows season,
Day follows night, night follows day:
Changes in seasons keep our senses sharp,
While one will come, the other pass away.
– by Anne Smith
February
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
February is not a poetic month –
Not even a harmonious word,
Hard to say and harder still to spell.
But worst of all is having to endure it…
– by Anne Smith
March
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
When I say I love water,
To be on water, in water, by it,
I mean: ocean, sea, river,
Stream, lake, pool, pond…
– by Anne Smith
Good Friday: Walk of Witness
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
A child wept at the crucifxion
Today, at the shopping centre,
Though Jesus was only an actor,
And His blood unconvincingly orange…
– by Anne Smith
Heard in the evening
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In the summer night
A violin’s plangent song
Fills us with sadness…
– by Anne Smith
Early morning - summer
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
a cloud of
translucent blossoms,
night moths flew up
from the dry leaves…
– by Anne Smith
Storm in the Dordogne
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
It was becoming hotter all that day;
The sun burned down, the sky was cloudless, blue,
And on the terrasse where we spent our time…
– by Anne Smith
Art and Nature
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
After the heatwave
It was not sunny but cloudy,
Dry with a bright breeze…
– by Anne Smith
Summer Weather 2012
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
clouds threaten
skies drench
earth sodden
rivers flood…
– by Anne Smith
In Praise of Autumn
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Heart-stoppingly new,
All pastels, still furled,
Still budded, not yet bedded,
Spring spreads pale skirts…
– by Anne Smith
Autumn Garden
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Summer’s merging sweetly
Into autumn;
Harvest’s over: no fruit remains –
apple, pear, fig…
– by Anne Smith
October Rain
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Early this morning
I go to my garden
To visit my plants.
As I go down the paths…
– by Anne Smith
November Night
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Wrapped up against the cold
I turned the corner. And saw there,
There where never before was
A small Big Wheel and…
– by Anne Smith
Winter
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
There’s something wrong with November,
It’s heavy and leaden and grey
With no promise of anything good…
– by Anne Smith
To Winter
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The gloomy sky as summer slides away
Reflects a mood both grey and overcast…
– by Anne Smith
Frost
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Footprints like exotic leaves
On a silver floor;
Fir trees prematurely grey
Where they were green before…
– by Anne Smith
Snow
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
It’s here again.
Feared and welcomed:
The mysterious magic
Of waking to whiteness…
– by Anne Smith
‘There's no business Like snow business’ or Here it comes again!
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Snow decorates the pavements,
Icing-sugars the roads…
– by Anne Smith
Summer rainstorm coming
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Under the threatening clouds
At the end of a long grey road
There was a sudden splash of orange
A woman in a summer dress…
– by Anne Smith
Observations
Sometimes I write of worlds that don’t exist;
Sometimes an everyday event
Attracts attention, asks to be set down
And here recorded.
– by Anne Smith
A dialogue
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The toecaps of my walking boots
Looked up in shocked amaze:
‘You cannot want us to go out
On icy, snowy days!…
– by Anne Smith
Christmas Song
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Christmas is a-cumen in
Lhude sing ‘Oh blow!’
Parties, silly hats. old songs,
If you’re really unlucky, snow…
– by Anne Smith
Christmas festivity
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Tis the season to be jolly
Crowned with mistletoe and holly
Paper chains, mince pies and gifts,
Snow in painter-pleasing drifts…
– by Anne Smith
Epiphany
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
They came to Bethlehem, it seems, by the light
Of a supernova, these men – or women –
Interested in the stars and science in general.
There were three gifts, we are told…
– by Anne Smith
Fairy Tale
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
She was a bundle of sticks and bones –
He less so, but then he went sooner –
Who would chirp and smile to meet the new day…
– by Anne Smith
Cause and Effect
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Archimedes, it seems,
Invented the computer,
Through whose gears he could show…
– by Anne Smith
Rant
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The man on the radio said
Having your family round you
Makes life worth while.
And I thought…
– by Anne Smith
Stereotyping
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Oats and whisky, pibroch and caber;
Beret, absinthe, Croque Monsieur-
These are the words we use to remind us…
– by Anne Smith
Room 101
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
What shall I put into Room 101?
What do I dislike so much that I want it
To be gone, never to have been?
I can rant as much as I like…
– by Anne Smith
On a Mathematical Plane
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
‘Nature’s great book is written in Mathematical symbols’ -Galileo
On the Mathematical Plain
A troupe of those small…
– by Anne Smith
Magic and Mystery
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Under our feet
Where we stand
On what we call reality
Lie magic and mystery…
– by Anne Smith
Invocation: to a pumpkin
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Orange-glowing globe, light the gloaming,
Banish gloom, ward off goblins
With terrifying teeth: your face frightens folk…
– by Anne Smith
Meditation
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In that inner room
There are no windows.
When I shut the door
Only velvet blackness…
– by Anne Smith
Hurricane life
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In the eye of the storm of life
Round which all places, all times, whirl,
Multi-faceted, separate, confused…
– by Anne Smith
Varieties of happiness
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The world is glorious, shining, sparkling,
Green and gold with promise;
Childhood holidays or being in love,
You can’t keep still for a moment…
– by Anne Smith
If only...
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
If only, in real life,
We went round as if in a film
Hearing the music which tells us
If we should expect the worst…
– by Anne Smith
Today is a doing day
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Today is a doing day:
Washing and cleaning, tidying
And reorganising.
The pale blue sky looks down…
– by Anne Smith
Innocence
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
In church today a baby called out
A loud holy coo of interest or pleasure.
The sound had no accent,
Gave no information as to gender…
– by Anne Smith
Lachrymosa
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
A tear shines
In the Virgin’s eye,
Slides down her cheek,
Quietly splashing…
– by Anne Smith
Divine Speculation
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Is heaven, I wonder, warm
Like a summer day in a flowery park?
Or bright,like a sharp frosty day…
– by Anne Smith
Knitting
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
When we are born we are nothing,
An inchoate blob of physical needs.
When we are young we begin…
– by Anne Smith
When we die....
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
And when we die
We start to be forgotten.
As we fall asleep
Our lives become a dream…
– by Anne Smith
The End of the World
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Above the earth
Beyond the stars
Behind all galaxies
At the edge of the universe…
– by Anne Smith
Auschwitz
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
We carry the guilt of the living.
We carry the guilt of the Gentile.
We do not come here as tourists
But in expiation: to pay our respects…
– by Anne Smith
Van with Man
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I passed a van today with on its side
Advertisement: Bespoke
Curtains and blinds and something else.
I wondered idly what the driver’d say…
– by Anne Smith
Morning Thought
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
about dementia
Waking, I’d suddenly no idea
Who or where I was
Or the time or day…
– by Anne Smith
History lesson
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
The dark gods swooped down;
They smelled the reeking hecatombs
Burning on the temple floor.
They sniffed, they lapped the pools of blood…
– by Anne Smith
If everyone believed.
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
If everyone believed
And I don’t mean ‘If only
Everyone believed’ –
My mood being reflective…
– by Anne Smith
Wind crackles...
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Wind crackles through the withered stalks,
Through leafless trees grotesquely stretching claws
Towards the oppressive and metallic sky…
– by Anne Smith
Dreaming
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Sometimes in the night
We slip from our familiar world
Into the sepia world of dreaming
Where everything is different…
– by Anne Smith
Nights
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
No man’s land, between the days, nights lie
Uninterested, black, mysterious.
Dark pearls upon the endless strings of time…
– by Anne Smith
A waking
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
I wake up
I open my eyes
it is not too hot
it is not too cold…
– by Anne Smith
Night Light
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
when it is dark
my bedside light
fights shadows
drives back goblins…
– by Anne Smith
Night sounds
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Come to the door at night. Listen.
The wind breathes softly through the leafless boughs
With a tiny rattle as they move together…
– by Anne Smith
A grey day?
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
‘It’s a grey day’ we tell each other;
In fact the sky is white not grey.
As we cross the river the water
Shimmers in silver, and raindrops…
– by Anne Smith
Family Matters
When family members die
They live in memory;
They, with our childhoods too,
Are part of who we are.
– by Anne Smith
Family Tree
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
My family tree unrolls before me,
A tattered fan, thin, with holes
Where people are missing.
Facing the other way I know everyone…
– by Anne Smith
Reminiscence from WW2
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
When I was little they said
After the war we’ll have bananas.
They talked about them so much
I rather thought they were fighting…
– by Anne Smith
Fifty three years ago..
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
You sit by the fire with crumpets
Your face flushed slightly in its rising heat;
I pour the tea and play the gramophone…
– by Anne Smith
Family death
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
A parent has died:
Generations shift their places
On the family tree…
– by Anne Smith
Sonnet for my Mother
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Gwen Pickard: 1914-1979
Your photo, standing on my windowsill,
Perpetuates a joke I did not share…
– by Anne Smith
Gwen
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
for my mother
You’ re sitting on a table
In a photographic studio;
You are three or four…
– by Anne Smith
My Father
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
(for ERM, aged 92)
I’ll tell you what it is:
Old people, sometimes, shrink
And are so wizened, mind and body…
– by Anne Smith
For Ernest Millington, my father: 1916-2009
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Read at his funeral in May 2009
I see you, hanging on my kitchen wall,
Pointing a minatory finger in that way you had…
– by Anne Smith
To those who follow me
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
To those who follow me
So far ahead you haven’t yet been born
Ileave this message:
If you’ve an interest in who we were…
– by Anne Smith
A Life
© Anne Smith | Copyright 2022
Spinning the thread of the life,
Trailing it behind her,
Black-cloaked Fate sits brooding.
Silver-gowned Fate weaves the thread
– by Anne Smith