Autumn hush
So quiet here
you can hear
the leaves fall
the children are
back at school
summer games
are over
In the spaces
between the houses
time limps along
in the silence
of empty life
John Lyons
So quiet here
you can hear
the leaves fall
the children are
back at school
summer games
are over
In the spaces
between the houses
time limps along
in the silence
of empty life
John Lyons

Poetry —many things
including a place
of repose
when we are time-sick
Soon the leaves
will come tumbling
down in cascades
borne on gusts of wind
raked up and bagged
on our streets
And as the nights
close in
peace will descend
and we will have
sessions of sweet
silent thought
and true value
will warm our blood
John Lyons
Life a timed test
anything may happen
or as the case may be
not :
sprawled on a blanket
or a towel spread out
on the sand
the chatter of children
and gulls in the air
and the sea gently
licking the shore
such moments of peace
fragments of eternity
time for this
time for that
and the leaves
itching to fall
to lay the boughs bare
a deep depression heading in
from the Atlantic
autumn sunsets
and then winter
Bring it on I say
while there’s breath
in me and love
bring it on
John Lyons

How light the liquid light
lies upon the sea
as the sun sets
the silver shimmer
of tiny waves that roll in
from the distant horizon
candescent curls
that ferry brilliance
to the shore : calm now
on this end of summer
afternoon with contentment
settled among the families
at play on the beach
fine dry sand underfoot
and a rising tide and a waning
moon in the wings
Here Turner knew
tempestuous times
when ships were lost
with all souls drowned
: but there were days too
when the placid waters
held his eye and he saw
only peace and comfort
his heart awash
with the beauty of it all
John Lyons
Visit the Turner Contemporary gallery in Margate. Open Tuesday to Sunday 10am-6pm.
As though we haven’t had
enough sun for one year
not that I’m complaining
the best summer
in a long while
and the sun brings out
the best in us all
it quickens our step
puts a smile on our faces
and lightens the daily load
John Lyons
And so September
hanging there in the trees
bowed boughs heavy with seed
there in the tired leaves
that long to fall
September with its warm
honeysuckle days
its cold nights
birds gathered
in their thousands
on wires and fences and rooftops
under starter’s orders
: perhaps I too
should follow them south
September with its whispers
its intimations of mortality
and a whimpering mind
that traipses through
the city’s dusty avenues
that journeys out
into the frail suburbs
of my past in empty reflection
Dark season of silence
of enhanced fragility
of bygones gone by
all the pain and loss
and yet still the hope
the faith in new seeds sown
that no more love
will be laid to waste
John Lyons

After the long dry spell
the grass is threadbare
covered in tall coarse weeds
and towering dandelions
: a couple of chairs
that were overturned
in the fierce storm
have yet to be righted
The word that comes to mind
is neglect or abandonment
although it’s not as though
nobody cares
just that nature appears to be
one step ahead of the neighbour
who has assumed responsibility
for the garden
Frankly he’s getting on in years
so I don’t blame him
in fact I blame no one
that’s just the way it is
plant life is so rampant
under these climate conditions
it poses a real problem but I trust
it will all work out in the end
John Lyons
September seeds
borne on wings
dispersed far and wide
on the wind
or in the gut of birds
life encapsulated
waiting to germinate
to spring forth
into new shade
and fresh fruit
out from the soil
driven by the sun
to spread its light
to carry its standard
to the far corners
of the mineral earth
John Lyons
After midnight
after hours of love
Charlie Parker
playing in my head
rain at the window
lying in complete darkness
half-listening to her breath
as she sleeps
I feel that perhaps
one day the world
could be a peaceful place
for poetry
John Lyons
And so it goes
as time slips
through our fingers
that nothing lasts forever
One by one
the petals tumbled
from the yellow roses
Monday mourns them
Tuesday buries them
poetry remembers them
John Lyons