Saturday, 10 August 2013

Would You Help? - a poem by Martin Binnington

 


Thursday, 25 July 2013

Prayer - a poem by (Anonymous), 2013

Prayer leads to every other response.
It’s the key that opens hearts.
It’s a time for grace, a time for the soul, for the heart to open.
It’s a time to prepare; a time to repair;
A time to repent; a time to relent;
It’s a time to reflect and a time to connect;
It’s a time to believe, to ask and receive;
A time to rest in God’s heart, to make a fresh start.
Prayer is a time for grace.

Anon, 2013

Monday, 15 July 2013

The Poetic Road - a video by Martin Binnington

The Path
by Alan Bold...

There is a path around a mile and a half from my house, which the local council commissioned a poet to write a poem on.
This video shows that poem. (The words are clarified underneath, as I realise that due to sunshine and shade, some of the words aren't clear)

“The Path” by Alan Bold
Watch where you are going,
These words you see are only growing,
You hop skip or jump into the game of life or death.
You look this way or that
Or wander from the given path
You can be almost an angel
Or purely a devil
You can give out warmth or embody cold evil
You can walk with your neighbour
Or run on ahead,
You can lie in your teeth
Or mean what you said,
This earth moves you through dark days and bright nights,
As you stand still on one of the sun’s satellites,
In perpetual motion,
Through space you spin round,
You can feel the emotion,
With your feet on the ground.
So though you are rooted,
You can never stand still
You can make this your heaven,
You can let it be hell,
Be it fair or bitter cold,

This is true.

Saturday, 6 July 2013

The Quiet Man - Chapter Two

Jude awoke with a jolt. There was still a shaft of light streaming through a solitary clean spot in a grubby window, which partially illuminated the scene. He rubbed his eyes, and groggily took in his surroundings. 
He was sitting on a long bench which stretched along most of one wall. He had set his pack on the bench beside him, and this had stopped him falling over as he slept. The door, through which he had entered, was to his left, about half way between Jude and the far wall. Opposite him, there was an old fireplace which hadn't felt the warm of a wood fire for a long time; there were layers of grey and brown feathers strewn around the blackened hearth. There was still a hint of a smokey smell in the room though. Perhaps the bandits used the area for shelter, just as Jude had, but made fires in another area so they didn't disturb the birds nests.
To Jude's right, there were two windows. Both looked to have been hastily boarded up, and there were gaps where the boards had fallen off. The light was entering through one such gap, but the windows had not seen daylight or rain for a while.
In the centre of the room there was an empty table, with a couple of wooden chairs tucked in on one side. On the other side, Jude could see the remains of another chair. Did the bandits use the chairs to make a fire, instead of searching for fallen branches in the woodland outside? It was a miracle that the place hadn't burned down!
Jude stood up, his thighs and hamstrings aching in protest at the sudden movement, and made his way to the table, where he set his pack down. He walked to the doorway and heaved on the handle attached to the old dark hunk of wood. Stepping outside, he realised that it was not evening like he had thought. He had slept through most of the night; the sun was already lighting the sky above the horizon, chasing the stars to the other side of the world, before making its journey up towards its midday zenith.
It was still very early, perhaps 5 or 6 o'clock. Jude went back inside, leaving the door open, and took out a parcel of food he was going to eat last night before sleeping. He sat on one of the two chairs, hearing the wood creak as it shifted to a new position to support his weight. He tore off a hunk of bread and took a few slices of the dried meat he had lifted from his larder, and sat chewing. His eyes glazed as he stared unseeing at the wall, while his mind was racing. Why was the letter sent to him? Surely there were others who were closer than him, who could be there before him? They must know it would take him days to make the journey... or maybe letters had been sent to all of them, and the first person who made it back would do what needed to be done.
The letter didn't contain many clues, but it didn't have to. The words that had hastily been scrawled on the parchment were all that were needed to make Jude act. It read:

He had seen the insignia before; it was the emblem of the Society of The Reborn, an Order which his parents had founded with a dozen others many years before Jude's birth, when they had found the artifacts.
After his parents had died, when Jude was a teenager, the twelve other founders had attended their funerals. They always wore the same; long black trousers with a red stripe running down the outside of each leg, shiny black boots, a long black trenchcoat with the red phoenix sitting proud on double breast pockets, and a white jersey with red collar.
After the formal ceremony of his father's funeral, two years after his mother's passing, the abbot had approached Jude, during the informal gathering, about accepting his parents' roles in the Society.
"There really aren't many duties that you'll have to take care of on a regular basis," the abbot had said. "You can come and visit the sanctuary with us when we return tomorrow, and see what it is we do. It might help you to recover from the trauma of losing your parents. We will, of course, support and respect any decision you make."
Jude had answered, "Can I come and see what you do before I decide? My mum and dad have... had never really told me much about it."
The abbot nodded. "Of course you can! If you decided you don't want to take up your parents' place, we won't try to change your mind. We would only ask that if anyone asks you about us, you won't tell them where the sanctuary is. There are those who would prefer that our Order didn't exist, and that the artifacts remained lost forever."
Jude had agreed to go. His curiosity had been sparked at the mention of artifacts, and the trip might help take his mind off things here, not to mention the sympathetic looks he would get from the neighbours. The next morning, Jude had packed a bag, left the key with the lady next door, who promised to tend his vegetable gardens and fruit trees, and keep an eye on the house while he was gone.
Just as he had done yesterday, the Society had travelled the North Road past the mountain, and had stayed at the inn at the crossroads.
Jude shook his head to dislodge that old memory, finished the bread and meat, closed his pack and left the abandoned house, forcing the door closed behind him. He turned to his right. The East Road, which would eventually take him near the port, stretched out ahead of him. He set out on the second day of his long journey.

Saturday, 15 June 2013

Alone - a poem by Martin Binningt

Alone
a poem by Martin Binnington
© May 2013

I'm in a room without a door,

A place I've never been before,

There's no way in, and no way out.

It's dark and dry, and oh so small,

My head's on the ceiling, my arms touch the wall,

There's no escape hatch, no way out!

There's scrabbling, as of little claws,

The constant buzz of tiny saws,

Why is there no way out?

It's claustrophobic, a trap perhaps?

Maybe a building has collapsed?

I try to yell, "Please, let me out!"

I realise I made no sound,

This room I'm in, it's underground,

That is why there's no way out.

I relax, accept my fate,

There is no sign of a heavenly gate,


I'm here forever, trapped, with no way out.

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

The Quiet Man - Chapter One

There once lived a man, who people called Jude. You might ask why they called him that. Frankly, I don't know. As far as I remember, everyone who knew him called him Jude. In fact, nobody in the village could remember his real name any more... This was his way though, he wouldn't correct people when they called him by this name; he actually preferred it to the one his parents had given him all those years ago, before they has succumbed to old age when he was in his teens.
There was no family nearby to look after him after they died, so the house they all shared was left to Jude, and his next-door neighbours kept an eye on him until he was old enough to look after his own affairs.
Jude was a quiet man, and had always been this way, by all accounts. He would stay out of people's way, which was difficult because he stood out from the crowd with his tall, lanky stature, his bright red hair, and his wide, almost stupid grin. If he was able to, he would help his friends and anyone else he could. He had virtually no money to spare, but would allow people to spend the night in his spare room, or would invite them in for some food if he saw that they were hungry.
He was considered wise by his friends, but stupid to those outside his small circle.
One day, Jude received a letter. This was unusual in itself; most of the people he knew lived in the same village, and most of his other friends didn't live too far away. He opened the letter, and felt for a chair behind him. He sat, without taking his eyes off the parchment in his hand, and leaned forward so his forearms rested on his knees. He took a deep breath, and appeared to be deep in thought for a few moments. Then, suddenly, he sprang from the wicker stool he had sat upon, dashed around the house with the letter still in his grasp, gathered some clothes, a few other supplies and some food, packed them into a backpack which he kept in a cupboard by the door, and strode out of his home, only stopping to lock the front door and give the key to an elderly neighbour.
This all happened around midmorning. He told nobody where he was going.
Jude lived on the south side of a fairly small island. In the spring and summer months, it was warm enough to grow all sorts of fruits, vegetables and herbs in his garden which stretched back from his house to the slopes of a hill. The hill sheltered his village from cold northerly winds in winter, and reflected the heat back into Jude's garden when the sun shone.
The day Jude left, he was spotted by a few men who were hunting deer in the forest to the west of the village. He looked to be heading up the North road, which was rumoured to be bandit country, so the men asked him where he was heading.
"There's a port at the north-west side of the island," Jude shouted back to them. "I have to see if there's a ship heading west across the Empty Ocean." And with that remark, he turned and continued on his way. The men looked at each other, puzzled.
"I didn't think he'd ever left the village," one said.
"Me neither, but he wouldn't leave if it wasn't important," the second man replied.
The third, the taller of the three, watched Jude disappear over the brow of the hill. Then he said, "I wonder if we should follow him, and make sure no harm comes to him?"
"Nah, he's a smart lad. At the first sight of trouble, he'll be lost in a cloud of dust as he runs away!"
For the whole day, Jude walked the long North Road, only stopping for a short break to eat some of the cake that he had packed, and to refill his water container at a waterfall which fell from a cliff overhaning the road. He reached a crossroads just as the sun was setting. There were a few houses and an inn. It looked to Jude as though none had been lived in for years, which was odd because this was where the North Road met the main highway from the east to the west of the island. He knocked on the old, sunbaked doors of each house, to see if anyone answered, after he had tried the door to the inn.
There was no answer from any house. They all lay vacant, with broken windows that looked like portals to the darkness which sometimes haunted Jude's dreams. He pushed open the door to the only house without broken windows. He didn't feel safe enough to sleep outside, and who knows what creatures may have crept into the open windows of the others.
He dropped his pack onto the bare wooden floor, grateful that the weight had been taken off his shoulders. He found the letter that he had hastily stuffed into the side pocket of the pack, and read it again...

To be continued...

Monday, 27 May 2013

The Stranger - a short story

The Stranger
by Martin Binnington
© May 2013

We sat back and watched the sun rising over the sea. Her head was nestling between my shoulder and neck, her naked flesh covered by a black and red woollen tartan blanket. I was using last night’s clothes to shield my bare back from the stark cold of the concrete wall behind us. It was one of those moments where you feel that everything is just how it should be, and yet in the back of my mind there was a hint of disappointment that this couldn’t last. The sun would rise, the night would be over, and neither of us knew what would happen next.
I should probably go back a while and explain how we met.
I was on holiday, taking time away from the mess and stress that was my working life. I had decided to fulfil a dream I'd had since I was in school, learning French with a beautiful exchange student during my final year. I had never wanted to visit big cities; they seemed too impersonal, the citizens were rude, it was a struggle to get anywhere because of the local workforce clogging up the roads and train services. But I love visiting little towns and villages. When you arrive in such places, you immediately get the sense that there has been a village on this spot since forever...
Anyway, back to the story!
I had been travelling since 8pm the night before. Actually, getting to the train station in London took an extra couple of hours, but the start of a holiday is only really measured from the time you board the transportation which takes you out of the country… I had caught the last Eurostar from London to Paris, which arrived at around 10pm. There was a connecting sleeper train departing from Gare d’Austerlitz at 10.45, which left less than an hour to traverse the infamous streets of Paris. Even with a maniacal local taxi driver, who swerved wildly between lanes, squeezed through gaps so tightly that I found I was holding my breath, and gesticulated and swore at anyone who cut across his path, I still had to run the last hundred and fifty yards to the right platform, and jumped aboard the train just before the doors slid shut.
I found my reserved seat in the first-class carriage. I hadn’t booked first class, but if this was a mistake then it wasn’t mine. I stowed my small suitcase and backpack in the overhead bin and slumped back in the luxurious adjustable armchair. I lowered the backrest to an almost horizontal position and shut my eyes
I dreamed that I was travelling on a train. It looked very similar to the train I had just boarded except for the lack of other passengers. We seemed to be on a track high in the air, and there was nothing but clouds beneath the tracks. The gentle rocking of the carriage and the click-click of the wheels made me very drowsy…
I dreamed within a dream. I was on the same train as before, travelling alone on the same bridge in the sky, only this time there was no sound. The silence suppressed everything; even the movement of the train seemed dampened. Suddenly, the sound rushes back, and I can hear the tearing of metal as the carriage jerks to the side and then pitches forward. The carriage drops for an eternity, I am pinned to the seat by the sheer speed at which I am falling. I see land below, then a river, then nothing.
The pseudo-dream over, I am still in the original dream, traversing the skybridge. Once more, there was the agonising screeching of the emergency brake, the lurch of the carriage to the side and then forward, and the long drop to the surface below…
I awoke in a panic, breathing heavily. I looked around, relieved to see people, but when I looked out of the window, we were travelling over a bridge and there was nothing but clouds below us. “Oh, shit,” I muttered. Surely the dreams weren’t a premonition. I rubbed my eyes, thinking the white clouds were just a remnant of the dreams. I looked out the window again, in time to see through a gap in the cloud. We were over a gorge, a river flowing some distance beneath us. An announcer came over the speaker system… “Le train va être arrêter à St. Gervais en 15 minutes. Il y aura un temps de repos courts, alors que nous avons en stock la barre de petit déjeuner, et nous quitterons à 09:20.Ceux qui quittent le train, assurez-vous d'avoir tous vos bagages et effets personnels avec vous quand vous descendez. Merci.
Ok, arrêter means stop… repos is a break… la barre is obvious… quittent le train?.. effets personnels… quand vous descendez? What does she mean, when we descend? Is the announcer saying we’re going to crash? I looked anxiously out of the window, waiting to see the other side of the gorge or await whatever fate had befallen me. The end of the bridge came first.
Ten minutes later, the train began to slow down. “Nous approchons maintenant de Saint-Gervais-les-Bains Le Fayet,” the next announcement reported. I was relieved when the train stopped and I stepped down from the train (Ah, that’s what “descendez” meant!) and waked into the station, stretching my legs and back while I pushed my luggage on a small cart.
There were trains every hour to Chamonix, but on the map it looked less than ten miles between the two towns; I could probably walk along the main road in a few hours and save the cost of another train ticket. It actually took four hours, and took me through a couple of villages, so I arrived in Chamonix at around 2pm. I had some lunch at a bistro, and spent a few hours wandering the main streets looking for hotels with vacancies. There were none. At 5pm I gave up and hopped on a coach which visited some ski resorts. This is how I found myself in the little village of Servoz at dusk.
The first hotel I came across was gorgeous to look at. You know the old log cabins you see in films? This was the same, but built on a grander scale, and of course the backdrop of snow-covered mountains was the icing on the cake. I entered, found the reception, and rang the bell. A moment later, an old woman peeked around the corner. Her face looked like a pug's, all wrinkles and folds. Her eyes were definitely there, somewhere! And to top it off, she had a half-smoked roll-up glued to one side of her mouth.
My French lessons went out the window. I stuttered, "Bon Joor! Havez-vous un room pour la nuit?"
She stared at me with the most penetrating look I've received when I couldn't see the eyes. She slowly took a draw of the cigarette, removed the cylinder from her mouth, and exhaled. "Non," was the only thing she said.
I figured I'd got it wrong, so like tourists everywhere I fell back on my phrasebook. Removing it, and flicking through the pages, I could feel my face burning with embarrassment. I cleared my throat and tried again.
"Bonjour! Avez-vous une chambre pour la nuit?" 
Once again, I received the laser beam stare, the slow crackling of the tobacco burning as it was consumed, and the exhaled "Non!"
If I wasn't so embarrassed, or if it was someone else asking, I would have struggled to hold in my laughter. The scene was comical.
I gave up. Rifling through the pages again, looking for the right phrase... "Tu sais où il ya un autre hôtel?"
For the third time I was subjected to the routine... The stare, the cigarette, the exhale... I ventured, "Non?"
"Non!"
I backed off. "Merci!" And with that I withdrew.
Searching the square for another likely-looking building, I spotted someone sitting by a fountain. The sun was close to the horizon, and only the tip of the fountain was bathed in light. The water looked like a shaft of white trying to reach the heaven, then lost the energy and dropped back down into the darkness of the pool. As I got closer, I knew it was a woman. Her hair, dark and long in the twilight, obscured her neck and shoulders. She was sitting on the lip of the pool, one hand resting on her lap, the other was tracing shapes in the water, creating small ripples which radiated out until they were swallowed by the waterfall. She looked up and saw me approaching and smiled.
I was immediately disarmed. Compared to the old crone, this young woman was warm, welcoming, and wasn't surrounded by a halo of smoke.
I got my book out again. The smile had made me forget my lines.
"Bonjour!  il ya un hôtel?" I ventured.
She looked at me. "Are you English?"
My mouth shaped to ask how she knew, but it must have been the way I pronounced the words or something.
"Yeah," I replied, "I just got here today."
Her accent sounded American, so I asked.
"Canadian, actually! But you were close." And then the smile again.
"Do you know if there's another hotel? The one back there doesn't seem to have room," I asked.
She nodded, "There's one near where I'm staying. I can walk you there. I was waiting for my friends but they could be a while."
She led the way, skirting the pool, not caring that the breeze was showering her with a cloud of vapour. She turned up a side street, where the swirling wind tugged at her coat and sent her hair whipping around her head. I tightened my scarf and followed, five steps behind.
The hotel she took me to had one room available, a double with en-suite bathroom. I took it immediately, not caring that it was severely overpriced for the end of the skiing season; I was just happy to find a room! The woman, who had introduced herself as Aliyah on the short uphill walk to the hotel, had made her excuses and left to meet up with her friends, leaving me in the hotel restaurant, alone but surrounded by tourists and locals alike. After the day I had been having, I was happy to know where I was, at least for the night. I ordered dinner, a medium-rare T-bone steak with roasted vegetables. While it was being prepared, I had also chosen a 2005 Damoy Chambertin red wine. A little expensive but since it was the first official night of my vacation I was treating myself. It’s not often that you can purchase a vintage Burgundy wine!
The main course arrived, and was delicious. The texture and subtle aromas from the wine were a perfect accompaniment to the earthy, slightly bloody taste of the beef and the tangy sauce. I had just finished, and was setting down my knife and fork and contemplating dessert, when the maître  d’ came over and whispered “Ze young mademoiselle you came with earlier is in ze foyer. She says it is urgent that she speaks with you.” I frowned. I had only known Aliyah for three hours. What could be so urgent that she needed a stranger like me? I stood up, finished the last drop of wine in the glass, put it on the table and followed the maître d’ to the reception desk.
Aliyah took me to the side. “I’m sorry, it’s not really urgent, but I didn’t know how else to get your attention. I didn’t know if I’d ever see you again. I’m only here for another day, then we’re all heading to Paris for a few days before going to London for a week.” She looked straight at me. “I know how crazy this must sound, but it feels like we were meant to meet. So here is my friend’s phone number here, and these are the addresses we’ll be staying at in Paris and London.”
She leaned in and kissed me. I was completely stunned by her forwardness, but I can’t deny that I hadn’t wanted to do the same when she left to meet her friends earlier. Her lips broke away from mine, and the confidence seemed to fade. She looked into my eyes again, then turned her gaze to the side and down. “Please, think about it,” she said, “it would be such a shame to not find out where this could go.” She smiled, and was gone. The revolving door, the card in the palm of my hand, and the sweet lingering taste on my lips were like the ghost of a potential future. Dazed, I went back to my table in the restaurant. I forgot about dessert, and finished the bottle of expensive wine with her offer still planted in the front of my mind.

Monday, 20 May 2013

One Fateful Day - a poem by Martin Binnington


"One Fateful Day"
a poem by Martin Binnington

My boss phoned today,
"Are you busy tomorrow Martin?"
I heard him say, anticipating 
an outrageous demand. 

"No plans," said I, "what can I do?"
He wanted help in the garden.
A sinking feeling,
I was looking forward to some rest,
But my good nature took over and said "YES".

Tomorrow came too quickly,
Sun shining, no clouds in the sky.
This couldn't last; it's Scotland after all!

In early afternoon, after a sandwich and a drink,
"I could phone and say I'm busy" I think.
But no, I donned my shirt and shorts,
Tied my running shoes tight
And left the comfort of home.

Ten minutes passed, I arrived at my boss's,
Wheezing as I knocked on the door.
I saw the devastation,
felt the same sinking feeling from the day before.
A tree surgeon had been,
branches and leaves lay strewn on the lawn
"Dammit! There goes my afternoon!"

After a rest, to catch my breath,
we set to work, carrying branches
on our shoulders or a barrow in my boss's case.
Back and forth, but never ending,
it looked a hopeless task.
Soon though, the tide turned,
our effort worked, but my shoulders burned,
from the glare of the afternoon sun.

A while later, the end was in sight
the boss left me to it and went inside.
My back started aching,
it felt like my spine was breaking,
and I still had the journey home!

A Childhood So Fleeting - a poem by Martin Binnington






"Night-time" - a poem by Martin Binnington


This is my first real attempt at poetry, so please be kind with the criticism...

"Night-time"
The daylight is fading,
The old sun has set,
Another day is ending,
But not quite yet.
The stars are emerging,
The moon is half full,
Our constant companion
That once was whole.
The sky seems so empty
save pinpricks of light,
Which slowly spin onwards
'til dawn breaks the night.
A new day is starting,
All action and noise,
Excitement and laughter,
A world full of joy.
But always remember
each day has it's end.
The darkness is waiting,
Like a dear, long lost friend.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Thursday, 18 April 2013

The Perfect Man - A Poem by Martin Binnington


 
While I'm working on my new poems, why not check out my discussions and reflections at:
and
http://martinbinningtonsmonologues.blogspot.co.uk/

If you like this poem, you might like my others which are posted on FanBox