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Saturday, 29 May 2021

THE UNIVERSE

 THE UNIVERSE

Peter Woodgate


It’s strange,

this Universe we try to understand

with Galaxies, Nebulae

and solar Systems, all are grand.

However,

look at the human brain,

the different cells and electric currents,

nothing there is plain.

Parts of the Universe have died,

some parts, as yet, not born

likewise brain cells too will die

dementia lives are torn.

Black holes, in Galaxies, swallow up

whatever gets too near,

dead brain cells can absorb the light

but not release I fear.

So, what of the Universe,

could it be a giant brain?

God’s, perhaps,

or am I just insane?

I can’t help thinking,

And this is no joke,

this Universe will expand, then explode

and God will have a stroke.       

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate

Friday, 28 May 2021

Spaceman

 THE NIGHT CALLER                                                                 

by Richard Banks 


The knock at the door was polite but insistent and would have caused no uneasiness had it not occurred at a quarter to three in the morning. If asleep, or only half asleep, I might have missed it or taken it into whatever dream was in my head. But I was awake, most definitely awake. Had I not just visited the bathroom and on my return to bed checked the time on my alarm clock. Even so, I was inclined to think that it was nothing, or at least nothing of consequence. The night was windy, something had blown over, or maybe... The knock was followed by a second knock, a little louder this time but no less polite. There was no mistaking it this time. The knocker I sensed was a person of discernment, of sensibility, but nevertheless an unexpected caller at a time of day when the usual sort of callers were yet to venture out.

         A third knock, scarcely more insistent than the first two, had me reaching for my dressing gown. Halfway down the stairs, my mind was in panic mode. This could only be bad news, an emergency, someone we knew had died or been injured in an accident. It was the police, who else could it be? Pausing only to turn on the hall light I flung open the door to reveal something that was definitely not a policeman, or any other type of man.

         The large green face that looked up at me smiled ruefully, revealing several rows of red incisors. A long yellow tongue flickered in and out of its mouth as the creature spoke. What its first words were I do not recall; I only remember that they were expressed in a version of the English language last uttered by BBC newsreaders in the early days of television. I attempted to reply with the same immaculate enunciation only to find that I had totally failed to take in what it had said. The voice that spoke had done so in a middling baritone - 'it' was most definitely a 'he'. His upwards gaze took on a look of bemused anxiety as my mouth opened and closed several times without speaking. The creature tried again, possibly repeating his first words that now became the most famous second words in human history.

         “Sorry to intrude. Rank bad form and all that, but could I possibly bother you for a recharge.” He held up an object of similar size and dimensions to a portable radio. He again smiled but this time in a way that did not reveal his teeth. I wondered what the dinner jacketed newsreaders might have said and, while wondering, heard myself invite him in. Well, it would have been impolite not to, a curt refusal might have blighted interplanetary relations for decades to come, and all he wanted was a recharge.

         I ushered him into the sitting room. It was my best room and had recently been re-carpeted. Regretfully the new sofa I had ordered was yet to arrive.

         “Do you have a three pin adapter?” I asked, pointing at the socket in the wall.

         He assured me that he had a “universal” and that my socket would do very nicely. He plugged in his radio or whatever it was and in the awkward silence that followed I invited him to sit down on the more comfortable of my two armchairs.

         “Would you like a cup of tea while we wait?” Utilising my talent for charades I mimed the raising of a cup from saucer to mouth.

         “Tea?” he repeated. The pause that followed suggested that he was somehow consulting a search engine. “Oh yes, a refreshing plant leaf infusion. Why not indeed. Let’s have some tea.”

         He fidgeted nervously as I explained that I would have to leave him for a few minutes. “The tea,” I explained, “is made in the kitchen.” I pointed towards the serving hatch between the sitting room and kitchen.

         “Through there?” he said, as though expecting me to crawl through it.

         Deciding that any further words of explanation might well have the opposite effect I left the room via the door. On my return I found him communing with my lemon plant in a series of odd, little sighs which the plant was reciprocating with sighs of its own. The creature broke off in mid-conversation and accepted the cup and saucer I offered him with a dexterity that suggested he had been practising. Raising the cup in accordance with my mime he poured the contents into an orifice that I had hitherto supposed to be an ear. The expression on his face suggested that the experience had not been an altogether pleasurable one, but determined to be the model guest he effected what I think was meant to be a sign of approval.

         “Are you not giving Lini one?”

         “Lini,” I replied, wondering if he had brought in an invisible friend.

         “Yes, Lini, your companion plant. She has not drunk for three days. A tea, I think, would be very much to her liking.”

         I disappeared back into the kitchen and on my return emptied the teapot into Lini’s container. He smiled, evidently satisfied that Lini was now a happier plant.

         “By the way, I haven’t introduced myself, I do beg your pardon, my name is Kogiwinnalottadosh, second son of the third family order of Magnus Vaniturnum. Call me Kog, everybody does.”

         I informed him that I was Kev of Fairway Avenue.

         Introductions over he volunteered the further information that he had come from a planet with a very long name that might have started with a Z, and that he had gone travelling with his second best wife, who also had a very long name.

         “Oh, I said.” I hope she’s not waiting outside. She’s most welcome to come in.” By no means convinced that I did want another extra-terrestrial in my sitting room I was relieved when Kog declined my offer with civility that fully acknowledged my kind intentions. His wife, he explained, was busy in their spaceship where she was making much needed repairs to a device called a gurgoblaster. This, he hastened to tell me, was the most important part of the ship and the reason why she was on-board instead of his number one wife. No one could fix a gurgoblaster like she could. Indeed, give her any piece of mechanical equipment she would not only repair it but make it work better than before.

         “How many wives do you have, Kev?”

         I replied that I had one and that she was presently asleep on our bed upstairs.

         “Only one?” he said, evidently puzzled by my reply but holding back on the questions he was surely thinking.

         I replied that most Earth countries had a one wife at a time policy and that very few of the said wives could change a car wheel, never mind repair a gurgoblaster. There is, I added, in a spontaneous moment of interplanetary diplomacy, “much we might learn from you.”        

         “And we from you,” said Kog. Indeed, I wish to know where I can find George Formby?”

         “George Formby?”

         “Yes, George Formby. You know, the cheeky chappy with the ukulele.”

         It transpired that Kog’s planet had been receiving radio and TV signals from Earth that first began their journey through space in the 1920s. Of those relating to light entertainment, none were more popular than the songs and films of George Formby which had acquired a cult following only rivalled by the more recent arrival of ‘The Lone Ranger’.

         “Do you have a ukulele, Kev?”

         His disappointment at my reply was only too evident. I hastened to assure him that although I was not a practising musician I was fully aware and appreciative of Mr Formby’s undoubted musical talents. Indeed, I claimed his song about the Brighton Rock to be a personal favourite. This was, of course, far from the truth although in the circumstances pertaining it seemed impolite to say otherwise. I attempted to maintain this fiction by singing the only two lines of the song I could remember. He instantly joined in and, with both of us feigning the playing of a ukulele, we sang, or rather he sang and I hummed until it was over. Kog clearly elated by our performance attempted to slap me on the back but had to settle for somewhere lower.

         “So Kev, where is he? Not far I hope.”

         I imparted the sad news that the great George had, “passed over.”

         The untroubled expression on Kog’s face indicated that I had not made myself clear.

         “You mean, passed over in a flying machine, no doubt going to America or Europe or one of your other Earth places. No matter, Kev, just give me the coordinates of his present location and I will be there in two shakes of a lamb’s tail, or maybe even one. By the way, what is a lamb?”

         Ignoring his last question I abandoned genteel euphemisms and in plain language informed him that poor George was dead. The cry of anguish that erupted from Kog was notable not only for the shaking of the ceiling but also the waking of her upstairs who having been thrown from her bed was now standing at the top of the stairs bellowing her displeasure. As Kog’s grief subsided into sobs I moved swiftly into the hall determined to prevent, at all costs, an encounter that was unlikely to go well. Fortunately having advanced no further than the first step down she showed no inclination to venture further.

         “What the hell’s going on down there? Don’t you know I’m trying to sleep?”

         I explained that a bereaved friend had called and was understandably upset.

         “Upset! I’ll give him upset if he makes that noise again. Now get rid of him and don’t let me find the house smelling of weed in the morning.”

         “Weed?” I replied, with as much innocence as I could muster.

         “You know what I mean.”

         I returned to the sitting room to find Kog slumped forward on the armchair, his head buried in two scaly hands, emerald tears flowing down onto the carpet. Fearing that these might add a discordant colouring to the carpet I hastily offered him a box of tissues which in the confusion of his grief he ate.

         “Kev, Kev, how can this be? He was so young, sixty years at most, little more than a child.”

         I consoled him as best I could by saying that human lives were seldom longer than a hundred years and that although George’s life had been somewhat shorter he had achieved considerable fame and riches. His only regret, I ventured to suggest, was that he knew nothing of his many fans on Kog’s planet.

         Kog’s head slowly returned to its normal positioning and nodded its agreement. The expression on the face suggested that my last statement had been less than logical. To Kog’s credit, his next words were only to agree with me that George had many fans, “thirty million at least and that’s only the membership of his fan club. They will cry an ocean.”

         Unsure as to whether this was an actual ocean or a metaphorical one I decided to steer the conversation towards the more certain knowledge that a statue of the ‘great man’ had been erected on the Isle of Man. It is, I assured him, “an awfully good likeness.”

         “But does it sing and dance?”

         “No,” I counselled, “statues seldom do.”

         “Nevertheless I must go there to make sacrifice. Tell me, Kev, what animal should I choose?”

         I replied that on-street sacrifices were generally discouraged on Earth and that the Isle of Man no doubt had by-laws against them. “Why don’t you light a candle or, better still have a flyover. You could dip your wings or loop the loop.”

         Kog considered my proposal behind an expression that suggested that wings and loop looping were concepts he was struggling to grasp. I was about to speak again when he did so himself. “I know what, we will fire our guns and send ten fiery missiles exploding like thunder in the night sky before falling back to Earth like sparkling rain. What could be better! …Don’t look so worried, Kev, we will point the guns up high. There will be no danger, and hidden by our invisibility shield no one will even know we are there. Trust me, my friend, we come in peace. George makes us brothers does he not?”

         I agreed that he did, at least I hoped he did. I was about to make some tentative enquiries about the guns when a shrill ping announced the ending of the charging process. Detaching his devices from the plug he turned to me with a rueful smile that signalled his intention to depart.

         “It has been great meeting you, Kev, an historic meeting, yes? The first between our two peoples. I will mention you in the book I will be writing. Who knows you may become as famous as dear George. Well, almost. But now I must go. There is much work to do on the ship and we must be away before your star brings its light again.”

         We exchanged gifts, I gave him an A-Z gazetteer of Great Britain and he reciprocated with an aerosol that he assured me was very effective in sweetening the mood of those whose sweetness was less than conspicuous. He gave me a knowing look and glanced up at the ceiling.

         I saw him to the front door and watched as he disappeared into the darkness. Too wakeful to sleep I lit up another joint and contemplated the new reality of life in an ever changing universe. What conclusions I came to I am unable to recall. Sadly the new dawn I glimpsed at around 11.30 seemed much the same as any other morning; the spray, labelled ‘Urk’, produced a howl of rage from she who was its target; and the news from Manx was so unremarkable that it is only known to those who live there. For nearly a month the only proof of that extraordinary night was the otherwise inexplicable disappearance of my A-Z, a circumstance already troubling for it being overdue at the library. When proof did arrive, trouble took on a new dimension - an email from Econ informing me that my quarterly bill was for twenty thousand, two hundred and eighty nine pounds and a less significant number of pence.

         Some experiences are priceless, some plain expensive, others are both, and I am broke. Heed well my tale. Beware the night knock on the door, and if you do open up, at least get a selfie.  

 


Copyright Richard Banks

Thursday, 27 May 2021

A Group Message

 A Group Message

By Sis Unsworth


I’m now counting down, till we all meet in June,

and speaking sincerely, it can’t come too soon.

It seems long ago, since we all last met,

so I’ll remind you again, so you won’t forget.

I will have bread pudding, here ready for you,

So make sure you turn up, whatever you do.

a big thanks to Len, who has kept us all going,

the Blog’s a success, and it keeps on growing.

But just as I’m feeling, so happy & bright,

I heard on the news, & it gave me a fright,

The Indian variant has entered our land,

and may change again, our well laid plan.

So the 24th jaunt, may not be so near,

like a fading dream, we once held so dear

So, keep fingers crossed, it will all be Okay

I’m sure we will meet on our chosen day.*

There will be bread pudding, waiting for you,

So take care and keep safe whatever you do!

Copyright Sis Unsworth

 

* Note:

Let’s see, the 24th of July 202?

Wednesday, 26 May 2021

Surfing in the park

 Surfing in the park

By Robert Kingston


In the shadows of the ancient tower

Through the moulton now hardened gate

Wheels of thunder rumbling on

To shrills do skaters skate

 

Rising, falling, weaving,  stalling 

at pinnacles, whilst air they seek

Then over again they practice

For perfection they do seek

 

Starting atop a fulcrum point

Slipping forward a balanced drop

Down with speed, bearings burning

Hot up until the ground is lost

 

Dropping like a rock to ground 

Spinning wheels round and round

A downwards slope where wheels do rest

Carrying forth to depths

And back again to crest 

 

A tip of toe, a stamp of foot

The board it twists, it somersaults 

In hand it's trickery is caught.

A forward thwart 

A jump upon a rail it's caught,

As shrills skate atop

 

A balanced slide

 

A leap of faith sees 

a trick complete

 

A skateboarders face alive

 

Copyright Robert Kingston (2014)

Tuesday, 25 May 2021

SECOND SIGHT

 SECOND SIGHT

By Rosemary Clarke


Though you cannot see me I'm still with you

Knowing all your sorrows and your joys

Seeing every worry life has brought you...

Remembering when you first bought that toy

How your eyes sparkled as you unwrapped it

Loving the excitement in your heart

Watching as you played too rough and snapped it

Crying with you as it fell apart

Bringing it to me to put together

Trusting just to me to make it whole

Make it fit for any kind of weather

Happiness for you, that was my goal.

Then you reached your teens and went to study

Making me so proud to see you win

Knowing that with joy and cheeks so ruddy

You were letting your true life begin

Then a mate had come so quickly after

With the children one, two, three, and four

Hearing all your family's new laughter

Knowing you were stronger than before.

Then disease struck and we parted time dear

They wouldn't let you see me in the ground

All your hopes and dreams were haunted with fear

Feeling I would never be around. 

Though you cannot see me I'm still with you. 

Watching as you smile through painful tears

Know that I will always be there with you

As I have been all along the years.

 

Copyright Rosemary Clarke

Monday, 24 May 2021

Broken

 Broken 

By Natalie Hudson

How do you cope when your life falls apart,
When you feel like you're plummeting back to the start,
How do you feel when there's nowhere to go,
When you've come to the end of the life that you know,
Where do you go when there's nowhere to turn,
When the lessons life gives aren't ones you can learn,
How do you move on from anguish and pain,
And yet not allow it to happen again,
How do you change from the life that you had, 
To one that does not make you lonely or sad, 
How can you trust, let someone else near, 
How do you overcome the doubts and the fear, 
How do you get past deceit and lies, 
When so much went on in front of your eyes, 
How can you move on and trust again, 
When all you've experienced ended in pain. 

Copyright Natalie Hudson

Sunday, 23 May 2021

Cheilin Saga ~ 03

 Cheilin Saga ~ 03 Sabretooth Mountains

By Len Morgan


Five days on, Aldor dismounted and handed over the reins of his mount to the quiet horse trader, with whom he had forged a firm friendship, in spite of their rocky beginnings.  

"May chance never be a factor," said Wedex as they parted.   He watched as his young friend started the ascent, waving a final time just before Aldor vanished from sight.   He would be heading for a mountain village known as Sudoren where he had been advised the Inn-keep would be expecting him.   From there, things would progress; others would collect and escort him to an unknown destination, home to the secret sect known as the Tylywoch.

   For three more days, Aldor traveled slowly but steadily upward wending his way along on narrow paths that would have proved exhausting to any normal man.

 

.-...-.

 

"Ho friend, where are you bound?"   The strange echoing voice seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere.

"Who asks," he replied, throwing his mind-scan wide so as not to miss anything.

"You travel my road, and I asked first, it would be polite of you to answer my question,” the voice replied. 

Aldor stood in the centre of a narrow path less than an arm-span wide. To his left a precipice and loose scree a hundred feet below.   On his right was a sheer cliff face, its base obscured by scrub and stunted trees narrowing the track even more.

"If you want my life history you might at least show yourself and look me in the eyes to see if I lie.   I would not expect less," he said casting his mind-net wide once more for any signs of human presence.   Almost immediately, he was viewing himself from a clump of bushes ten yards behind him.   He stopped and sat on his haunches.   One by one, other minds appeared from nowhere.   There were four of them; he proceeded to isolate one mind for investigation.   Its owner displayed a high degree of tight control, hard and unyielding.   The person was knowledgeable in combat techniques tactics and weapons.   The mind was young strangely feral yet focused as if life and death issues were constant bedfellows. 

 

 He skipped quickly from one mind to another, looking for one slightly less reserved, he drew on those scant gleanings…  

"Tiger quad," Aldor said aloud, "you have been sent to test me, but I am also testing you.   I make your numbers, four very young warriors, that is what you are.   I respect your temperament, restraint, and control."   He sought for them again but suddenly all signs of their presence had vanished.   They were not hidden, or masked by distance, neither were they shielding, they were gone.   He investigated their hiding place, beyond the bushes; he discovered a narrow fissure leading to a cavern inside the mountain.   He was unable to follow; he was much too large to slip through the gap.

 

He stopped to eat, and quench his thirst, seemingly to take his ease.   All the while, as he continued up the narrow path, his mind was focussed to the front and rear, seeking any signs of life.   He became aware of birds and other small creatures as ‘Beastmaster’ he could use them to his advantage, as advance sight of what lay ahead.   He proceeded quicker now, and with more confidence.   From a kestrel's eye view he fancied he saw movement on the path half a mile ahead, this happened several times but he never actually caught sight of anything.   He continued his journey for most of the day, ever upwards, finding it easier to flit from the mind of one small creature to another, yet, even that proved surprisingly tiring.   Eventually, he learned to restrict his forays to the occasional quick peek.

   As the sun edged towards the horizon he laid the dried twigs and sticks he'd gathered, in passing, and struck a spark to set them a'flame.   He prepared to spend another night beside the cliff path, his constant companion.  The air became colder and the fire gave of scant warmth.  He drew on his mind to radiate heat to his outer clothing set his internal sentinel to watch, and relaxed.

 

   He awoke with a start, no moon in the sky, he cast around sensing a young mind devoid of emotion but, unlike a wild animal, it was disciplined.   Suddenly he was seeing through other eyes, viewing himself from his right.

 

   Meillo of Bear Quad raised a missile and threw it in his direction.   He rolled rapidly towards her, opening his eyes as the missile flew harmlessly beyond his moving form, landing lightly where he had been lying an instant earlier.   He made a grab for her but, even as his hands closed on her leg; she twisted and evaded his clutches with ease.   The maneuver was accomplished at incredible speed.   He was completely surprised, he'd never seen another human move so fast, he looked for her but, she was already gone.   However, at the moment he made contact he received a burst of information.   So, immediately he cast around for the other three.   They were six or seven years old, trained as warriors from their first steps.   They were testing him, he returned to see the missile Meillo had thrown at him.   It was a small green crab apple.   He had no time to dwell on the matter; further similar objects were already in flight towards him.   Dropping to his knees, he noted their trajectories and cast his mind out in four directions, and he had them.   "Meillo, Tavis, Kellor, and Fugel, you can stop this now and show yourselves.   The test is over, and you have passed with distinction," said Aldor.

He waited expectantly, but there was no answer.   Several minutes passed, and he started to feel apprehensive.   Somebody was consciously using his senses against him, in a very cool and calculating manner.   Gradually he became aware of an adult standing at the edge of the trees.   At first, he simply watched from afar, then as he slowly sauntered towards Aldor who turned slowly, to face him.

He began to speak. "We walk a narrow line between life and death.   Had any of my students responded, in any way, to your words they would now be dead," he said in a matter of fact tone of voice as he continued to close the distance between them.   "Had your death been ordered, the deed would already have been done; you would have heard and seen nothing.   "My name is Lomax, I am thirteenth warrior and Kebu master of the Carnivores.   Your first meeting was with the Tigers.   Tonight you met with the Bears.   The third quad you have yet to meet."   He gestured to Aldor's right, where four young child warriors stood within touching distance; he had not been aware of their approach.   "These four are Wolf quad,” he said.   He nodded an acknowledgment to each then his gaze returned to Lomax, who now stood directly before him offering his hand.

 Aldor smiled and they shook formally.   As if this were a signal, eight more young warriors materialized behind and beside him.

"Brother Wedex is a good judge," said Lomax.

"Are you here to escort me to Sudoren?" Aldor asked.

"We will not be going to Sud at this time," Lomax replied.   "You will instead be traveling home with us,” it was not a request, and compliance was not optional.   "Meillo, your Bears will assume responsibility for educating Aldor and teach him the ways of the Tylywoch."   It was the first confirmation of their identity.   "Aldor, please learn well, because they will be held responsible for your actions."

The four acknowledged him; "You will become our fifth" Meillo smiled.   Please do obey our instructions; until you are told otherwise, your life and ours may depend on it.   This boy is Kellor, this is Fugel, and this girl is Tavis."

"Welcome little cub," they chanted ritually as one,

"May chance never be a factor," he said to their, well hidden, surprise.

"I will try to prove worthy of your acceptance," he said.

"You will do better than try," said Lomax, "I note you use the word acceptance rather than trust.   The former is given, the latter must be earned."  

His education began immediately.  

"We do not camp in open spaces such as this," said Meillo, "It is easy to attack and hard to defend.   We light fires only when we want to be found.   We carry our own travel rations and water and wear our capes at all times in exposed areas.   It protects us from the elements and from watchful eyes.   We take to the high ground close in on sunset, then move, after the light has faded, to a previously selected spot.   Unless we are in a hurry we stop, for eight hours, each takes a turn to stand vigil for two hours.   We always move on before Sun-up."

"Here are your cape and rations for the journey," said Kellor.   "Your pack will be left here and retrieved later so if you need anything from it you should get them now."   He retrieved the letter of introduction.  Kellor then instructed him on the proper uses for the cape, as a groundsheet, tent, a means of camouflage, and a water collector.   He then pointed out preferred places to site it when they stopped.   The ration was pressed fruit and honey cake, a hard block of cheese, a bag of dried fruit, nuts & seeds, and a long strip of hard dried meat.   "You cut off a one inch cube with your knife and chew it on the journey; we never stop to eat.   These are three to five day rations" said Fugel "we supplement them with wild foods foraged from the land, as we travel."

"We will start to show you how and where to find them tomorrow," said Tavis.

"This will be your first night with us.   You are both a probationer and Gaijin, so will not be required to stand vigil."

“I would prefer to do my share of the work," Aldor began.

"And, so you shall,” Meillo replied,   “When you have proved your worth and earned our trust."

 

"He did not sleep immediately despite the heavy pace that had been set; there were no concessions made, on his behalf.   They journeyed overland, never touching a beaten track, taking great pains not to leave a single blade of grass out of place as they passed.   He was always in the middle of the quad, never allowed to make tracks or to hide evidence of their passage; though he was repeatedly given the theory for both.

"Repetition is a good teacher," Meillo explained, ‘over and over…’

So, instead of sleeping, he lay awake reliving the journey step by step.   He then tried to scan the minds of his companions to augment his learning.   But, even at rest, their minds were rigidly disciplined displaying their iron will.   He learned little and was unable to penetrate beneath their superficial surface thoughts, which as always were centered on survival.   He did however discover that they held him in low esteem.   They were the top quad, which was why they had been given him as a project but, they were all aware that he was the Bears handicap, to even things up for the Tigers and Wolves.   He resolved to keep his head low and learn quickly in order to minimize the adverse effect he was having on them.   Lomax was twice their age, and nearer to Aldor’s age.   He was a natural leader;   Knowledgeable and totally aware of everything that went on within the Kebu.   It almost seemed as though Lomax possessed a special sense, like that of a beast-master. 

 

(To be Continued)

Copyright Len Morgan