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Val Plante
Born and brought up near Birmingham in the Black Country, went to Art College, married and had three children, youngest born in Scotland, where I've lived for the past thirty years. I enjoy doing all things creative: essays, funny verse and, more and more, serious poems.
Poems
HEALING
Rain, like broken strings of pearls straffs winter windows, gulls arc tearful skies, cry. In a quiet house, mother rests, daughter looks out.
Outside, a piece of rainbow jewel pins hope to the horizon, doves sooth, croocoo, croocoo, from sunset-gilded roof; inside, laughter catches.
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FRENCH WINDOW
Mrs Bradshaw beckons, her English blooms, poppy red, wave on leggy stems, uprooted into Gallic clay.
Dancing shadows deepen, shuttered windows’ indigo shade, chase ochre-encrusted lizards across sun-warmed walls.
Golden orioles haunt grey ghosts of poplars, whisper through cloistered groves and sunset floods cornfields blood brown.
An elder tree amplifies, champagne-blossomed, the nightingale’s nocturne and a startled snake escapes into emerald depths.
At the open window, an Englishwoman bathes in the cool silk of a full May moon, and listens for the silent river.
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BEDROOM MAKEOVER
Ravaged by the rituals of goodbye I lie on the fake fur of my abandoned bed.
Released from those habitual bonds I cry into the black sheet of a nihilistic night.
Aroused under that predatory gaze I sigh beneath the brindled gold of this tigerish morning.
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