JINGLE ON MY SON!

JINGLE ON MY SON!
A doughty champion of his local culture.(Poet Tom Hubbard)Your performance at the city hall was soooooooooo good! Christoph thought it was excellent! (Carolyn)

7.10.20

CORONA POEMS - LOCKDOWN IN TUEBINGEN






 
 
CORONA POEMS - INSPIRED BY THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF ULRICH METZ TAKEN DURING THE LOCKDOWN, AND ITS AFTERMATH, IN TUEBINGEN, TWIN CITY OF DURHAM.

A DISPLAY OF ULRICH'S PHOTOGRAPHS ALONGSIDE THOSE OF 8 OTHER PHOTOGRAPHERS COMMENCED ON SATURDAY OCTOBER 3RD AT 11AM IN TUEBINGEN'S HOLZMARKT WITH A GUIDED TOUR OF 23 STORE WINDOWS IN THE CITY WHERE THE PHOTOS, AND MY POETRY TEXTS, ARE FEATURED FOR A PERIOD OF 6 WEEKS.




A FALLEN GLOVE



'Tuebingen ... .is like a fallen glove; it lies there in an empty and hushed hangover ....' (Eduard Moerike}


'If there is anything that one can always long for and sometimes find, it is the loving attachment to another human being. (Albert Camus)


(1)


The sky above the Rathaus

has grown

so blue.

All the planes

have flown away

and made

the clouds

pure and clean,

filled with a sparkling rain.


Listen close

and you can hear

birds' wings flapping

and their songs

wafting over the Neckar.


All well and good

but today

we are crippled

by a virus

that kills choirs

and separates

people

from each other

when all they ever yearned for

was to hug their families

and to bury their old people

with some kind
 
of dignity.


It will pass.

Choirs around the world

will embrace

each other again.

And celebrate

the blue skies

and how,

especially in a crisis,

people can find

new ways

of crafting

love.



(2)


Hundreds of miles

away,

I am touching

trees

on the Platanenallee.

I am expressing

solidarity

behind my mask.

I am bridging,

with my imagination,

social distancing

so that I can enjoy

feeling the breath from the river

whispering joy

through Tuebingen's branches

and briefly kissing away

the curse of dreams

dying.


(3)


BOULANGER LOCKDOWN


The bar

has fallen

silent,

shut down

by a quirk

of nature,

closed

out of fear.


I remember

the noise

of people ranting

in the vibrant night,

the clatter

of their tongues,

and beer glasses

echoing

in my dreams.


Now

the tables are covered

in a virus shroud.

We cannot touch

the surface of the wood,

we cannot even smile.


But, from Durham,

I send laughter

to the old and young,

the lonely.

I email hope

to the suffering.


My old friend,

I will not forget

the poems you made:

they will live on

in the beauty

of your grandchildren.


(4)



THE BUSKER


This busker

plays a song

drunk with grief.

It seems that

all life's sadness

is gathered

in his loner's voice

that flutters

and stutters

across the street

in this closed-down town;

this cul de sac

soaked

in wasted wine

and bitter memories

of better days.



(5)


PANDEMIC WEDDING

 

This is marriage of loneliness,

of inconvenience,

of social distance;

a separation

united in a strong affection,

a love of life

that transcends

a lockdown,

overcomes

the fear of touching.



(6)


The next time

I stride

through the door

of the Cafe Piccolo,

I will not wear

a face mask,

I will not be scared

to open up my heart.

I will take a beer

in my lips

and swallow

the sunshine of it,

cracking open

a new joke

to share with Michele

and next year's

spring flowers.

 

 

(7)


ON CORONASTRASSE


On Coronastrasse,

there are lovers unable to touch one another,

children cut off from the old,

vicars who cannot pray in their own churches.

On Coronastrasse,

there are working girls who cannot find work,

footballers with no games to play in,

libraries with no books to borrow from.

On Coronastrasse,

there are hotels with no rooms to stay in,

buses and trains without any passengers,

seminar rooms emptied of seminars.


On Coronastrasse,

there will be sunshine again,

wine and song to fill the days and nights

and futures to dance in.



KEITH ARMSTRONG

 



the jingling geordie

My photo
whitley bay, tyne and wear, United Kingdom
poet and raconteur