What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
Our modems chatter like a pair Of neighbours at a gate To share a joke, or rubbish Blair, Or simply ventilate.
I welcome like a punctual train Such serendipity. For elevating the mundane I thank you, chère amie. G.M. Davis
Provincial freedman’s son, in civil war He joined the losing side and tasted rout, But by the time he died he was a star, Greeted by strangers when he walked about. He made friends easily (including me). He hated show without exalting thrift, And stood for comfortable sufficiency. Contentment was his watchword and his gift.
The springtime moved him, but he never read Wordsworth, and worked an earlier tradition; To him it augured time’s relentless tread, Mortality, impending inanition.
He loved a joke, and often at his own Expense; he loved good fellowship in Bacchus. His lyric monument still stands alone. Poet and friend, thank you, Horatius Flaccus. Colin Sydenham
I seldom say how much your visit matters, An unexpected call, your well-loved face Expectant beyond the door; your patient letters Taking me through our past. Can one replace A lifetime’s closeness? Others come and go With pleasing words and witty conversations, Earning a day’s delight, but you are no Passer-by. Through age’s alterations Our friendship has remained. Sometimes we seem Bonded in silence, speech superfluous; Sometimes we chat, recalling a common dream Of a world that long ago belonged to us. In illness we hold the other’s trembling hand, For warmth can cure where doctors work in vain. Such ties as ours all lovers understand; They soothe our grief, and mollify our pain. Frank Mc Donald
My dearest Bill, your practised skill At lightsome verse and prose Ignites with such a witty touch Whatever you compose.
I call you friend, though each weekend Our friendship’s put to proof, Our armoury the jeu d’esprit, The pastiche and the spoof.
Your comic flair makes you the heir Of Carroll, Wodehouse, Lear; My muse is bound to Gothic ground, Where Poe was pioneer.
Amazingly, you once called me ‘Il miglior fabbro’ – A flattering trope, but still I hope You’ll miss me when I go. Basil Ransome-Davies
You do not spare your feelings, much To my delight: and you admit A loyal fool like me. You touch On everything, as you see fit –
And so our conversations thrive On honest ground, on talking straight. You’ll contradict, will not connive In silences. You love, you hate
Considerately, and do not scorn The world. You always have a cause For weeping or for laughter, fawn On no one. And you loathe applause,
Unless well-earned. So here’s a cheer For you, the way a river’s eddy Catches your eye, the way you clear My head. Let’s stay unsteady, steady. Bill Greenwell
No. 2442: Bouts rimésYou are invited to offer a poem with the following rhyme-words in this order: crown, brown, post, boast, promotion, notion, share, there, day, say, hat, that, throat, note, brim, him. Entries to ‘Competition No. 2442’ by 4 May.
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