These are two more poems I have blogged before, but I want to keep sharing them..
I found them both in Hand Luggage - a quirky anthology by John Bayley. And they could not be more different.
The first is A War by Randall Jarrell. Its context is World War 2, and it is tragically topical. The way he inverts the expression: "You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs" gives the familiar saying startling effect. The poet knew only too well what he was talking about as he was in the US Airforce at the time.
A WAR
by Randall Jarrell
There set out slowly, for a Different World.
At four, on winter mornings, different legs...
You can't break eggs without making an omelette
- That's what they tell the eggs.
The "different legs" suggests to me how many young men have been sacrificed to the gods of war - relays of them. As they are being sacrificed to this day, and will be I guess until God's Kingdom is ruling over the earth.
The other poem I wanted to share is a gentle parody of Thomas Hardy (whose poems I love):
A Luncheon (Thomas Hardy entertains the Prince of Wales)
Albeit to see you I'm unglad
And your face is fraught with a deathly shyness
Bleaching what pink it may have had,
Come in, come in, Your Royal Highness.
Beautiful weather? — Sir, that's true,
Though the farmers are casting rueful looks
At tilth's and pasture's dearth of spryness. —
Yes, Sir, I've written several books. —
A little more chicken, Your Royal Highness?
Lift latch, step out, your car is there,
To bear you hence from this antient vale.
We are both of us aged by our strange brief nighness,
But each of us lives to tell the tale.
Farewell, farewell, Your Royal Highness.
As John Bayley says in his intro to the poem, Hardy would probably have appreciated it too. I hope so anyway.
How creative Jehovah made us to be. But we are made in his image, and he is "the Grand Creator". And damaged though we all are at the moment, we can still be very creative. We need to be I think. And I have chosen one of Col's photos of a grand creation, the Swallowtail butterfly, to head this blog. It was taken on one of his trips to Corfu.
It is lovelier than the most expensive Tiffany jewel, and has finer engineering than our latest computer system. Doesn't it tell us of its Grand Creator as clearly as if it spoke?
I managed to get to the Kingdom Hall by person, not pixel, on Thursday, thanks to my gallant chauffeur and valet Captain Butterfly. Two more blood tests on Friday - horrendously bruised arm, not the fault of the nurse, but due to the state of me. It was still very hot, but we drove to the Post Office and I managed to stock up on the little cards that I am using in my witnessing, and Col went and got some more bread and some strawberries from Waitrose. I simply could not make it the few steps to Waitrose to go with him, which I am trying not to get too depressed about.
When we came back from the shops there was a cool breeze coming off the sea which was so welcome.
Another June approaches rapidly... how grateful I am to be here still.
We had a special morning at the Kingdom Hall yesterday - I had to attend by Zoom as Col was off with the detectorist lads. When I have digested a few points I will probably blog them.




