Home
ABOUT US
Recent Posts
- Out Of Darkness
- Colour my World
- Assessment
- A Tribute to Frank Ifield by Harriet Blackbury
- Butterflies
- A Tribute To Richard Tandy ( Electric Light Orchestra) by Harriet Blackbury
- A Tribute To Duane Eddy (Duane Eddy & The Rebels) by Harriet Blackbury
- A Tribute To Michael Pinder (The Moody Blues) by Harriet Blackbury
- The Chair Affair
- A Tribute To Steve Harley by Harriet Blackbury
Recent Comments
- Pitch Perfect on
- Pitch Perfect on
- Making A Difference on
- Loose Ends. on
- Harriet’s poem live on LDOK.net on
Categories
- Animals (74)
- Family Life (285)
- Friendship and Trust (128)
- General information (3)
- Hope and Encouragement (170)
- Irony / Inevitability (139)
- Justice / Revenge (30)
- Laughter & Tears (32)
- Life/Living (197)
- Music (329)
- Nature (2)
- Nonsensical Madness (186)
- Obituary / Memorial (61)
- Radio (133)
- Reviews (7)
- Romance (220)
- Sport (144)
- Sunday Poems (15)
POEM ARCHIVE
ONLINE SERVICES
BOOKS
Contact Us
Useful Links
March 15, 2021
and when I thought all hope was gone,
my watch had stopped at five to one.
and then I thought ‘what can I do’,
by which time it was ten past two.
I’d lost my mind, which worried me,
until it returned at quarter to three.
I showered and dressed, and opened the door,
by which time it was twenty to four.
I breathed fresh air, and felt alive,
as the town hall clock struck dead on five.
I walked for miles – my mind to fix,
by now it was six minutes past six.
I talked to people, it felt like heaven,
then wandered home at half past seven.
I took a path, which wasn’t straight,
that got me home just after eight.
I cooked some food, and drank some wine,
then read in bed, til well past nine.
‘I simply must do this again’,
‘to hell’, I thought, ‘with News at Ten’.
written by Harriet Blackbury
No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post.
Leave a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.