Saturday 16 March 2024

NEW ENQUIRIES DAILY 2024




In order of composition, newest at the top. 

Photographs from Ashurst, New Forest unless indicated otherwise.




Last year the primroses

rose rather modestly -

primly, even.

Now they’re on the rise.

 

Ah, the eternal question

of how to define the temporary!

This machine’s rejected notes for over five years,

but that’s less than a blip in the universe’s timespan. 



Let us assume them

mother and daughter:

that hereditary pink hair

seems to fade a little over time.

(Portsmouth)



I like

a good yard sale.

How much

if I take the lot?


(Portsmouth)



All I can say is

if Boris tried to seduce me,

I’m pretty sure

I wouldn’t fuck him.


(Portsmouth)


 

Portsmouth is looking at me

eyelash-branches in its eye.

I'm not sure I want to look

at Portsmouth.


 

What is the effect of causes?

To make matters other

than they would have been.

But what is the cause of effects?


(Portsmouth)


 It was a squeeze

to get through, we won't deny it,

but you can't tell us where we’ll fit in,

nor what we're meant to do.

(Portsmouth) 

 


Why did the couple next to me

spend the whole hour down to Portsmouth

wordless, bookless – phoneless, even

in favour of staring at places like this?

(Fratton) 


 


Why must magnolia move

just as one is snapping it?

It looks too late

to be part of the process of blooming.

 

(Oxford)

 


‘How many greats’

asks the clock of the sun,

‘do I need, to get back to 

you being my parent?’


 

Its job

is to illumine, and yet it reflects.

But reflection

can throw light on matters, too.


(Whitechapel, London) 



Halfway up

is surely better than halfway down,

even conceding

that they’re the same place.


(Edgeware, London)

 

 

The law of diminishing rocks

States that size is proportional to distance.

I’d be tempted to increase the size by corresponding increments

were it not for the view from the other end.


(Whitechapel, London) 



Death’s on its way

I know it you know it

I just hope I don't look

this scared or surprised.



 

Dead flowers

may seem a bad omen,

but when there are seven

the summer is going to be good.




I like the way a celandine 

spreads. No holding back,

no fear of looking daft if the sun stays in -

even though it probably will.




I've never got off the train

at Millbrook.

Nor it is obvious

why I should...


(Southampton)



It makes little sense

that something so common as daffodils

can retain the power to enchant.

Yet there they are.

 


I like this picture

enough to include it,

even though

I have no words.


(Southampton)


 

If walls have feelings

the same as some rocks,

this one must be suffering

quite a bit of pain.


(Southampton)

 


Would you want to live in a house

that backs onto death quite as directly as these?

Even if it made your last journey

that little bit quicker?


(Southampton)


 


Why do cars have ears?

To help,

of course,

their drivers to see. 


(Southampton)



Even 

in the pebble kingdom,

single parent families 

are on the rise.

 

(Broadstairs)

 

 


On Broadstairs Beach 

I can connect nothing 

to Eliot.

I need to get to Margate, fast.

 

(Broadstairs. In 1921 TS Eliot, recuperating from a nervous breakdown, had sat in a shelter on Margate’s seafront while writing Part III of The Waste Land.‘On Margate Sands / I can connect / Nothing with nothing. / The broken fingernails of dirty hands. / My people humble people who expect / Nothing.’)

 


Here everyone is keen to please

They serve with smiles,

stop to let us cross the road,

accommodate guests who can’t spell.

 

(Broadstairs: photo of sign spotted by Steph)





Alder was felled

Berry had no time to ripen; Pollard 

was cut back; White went into the dark.

Everyone was grateful to them.

 

(Broadstairs)

 


They like their puns in Thanet

‘Max Headroom’ was already one,

so ‘Matt's Headroom’ is a pun

as squared as the back of a haircut.

 

(Broadstairs)


 


‘You won't be planting that in me

unless you use a

very, very powerful

anaes…. ‘

 

(Broadstairs)


 

How long was it? 

Probably not as long as it seemed.

The air was tossing, turning, shifting,

never could quite settle in its bag.

 

(Broadstairs)

 

 


Follow the line past the bin

and just beyond infinity

you'll find him cleaning windows 

in a never-ending cycle…

 

(Margate)


 


What may seem

a difficult project

is seamlessly achieved here:

the gridding of sand.

 

(Margate)

  


I guess I shouldn’t be surprised

that the ‘Rose in June’ is closed in March

Business must be a struggle 

on just one month a year 

 

(Margate)

 


We’re proud to live here

up to a point: a point 

that was tested in 2011 and tipped in ‘22.

Can we move to Princess Anne?  

 

(Broadstairs: there is a ‘Princess Anne Road’ nearby. Accusations about sexual abuse by the already-less-than-popular Prince Andrew, Duke of York, arose in 2011, in the context of his association with the convicted sex trafficker Jeffery Epstein. In 2022 he made a multi-million pound settlement to prevent the matter reaching court. That was widely seen as a tacit admission of guilt, and the royal family obliged Andrew to withdraw from public life.)


 


This will be

the national hub

when the Barbie Revolution 

skateboards into town. 

 

(Broadstairs)


 


Do I detect

a certain determination

to stop anybody getting under

Westover Road?

 

(Broadstairs)


              

This is a seat

worth sitting on:

I may not even need

to need the loo.

 

(Margate)

 


Two up two down

in Cliftonville:

they don't make wildernesses

the way they used to.

 

(Margate)


 

Spoiler alert

The winner is revealed,

and he doesn't look surprised…

or even happy.

 

(New Milton)

 


I expect 

to find things pretty disgusting, 

that being the state of the country these days. 

Does that mean I should mess the place up?


(Café, New Milton)

 

This is the shape

of the boundary

between 40 and 100 % gravel -

with gravel roughly equal on either side.

 

(New Milton. The typical concrete mix is made up of roughly 10% cement, 20% air and water, 30% sand, and 40% gravel)

  


That must have been

one hell of a closing party,

a night on which the usual old customs

seemed so cool they might have been new.

 

(the former Old's Cool Occasions and Old's Cool Customs, New Milton)



Ignoring the rain

I combed the streets 

for items of interest - 

and all I found was this.


 (New Milton)



Why is it called

Old Milton?

You don't say Old York or Old Amsterdam. 

Let the usurpers carry the burden of distinction!

 

(Old Milton)

     

I was puzzled for a moment 

Why would the Evening Standard

 list the contents of The Independent?

Then I realised my mistake – or theirs...

 

(Northern Line, London)




The problem is

if you’ve laid down

you won’t be able to reach

the top of the box to open it.

 

Stute

should be a word

for an intelligent person.

Who wouldn’t want to be a stute?

 

(If you put ‘intelligent person’ into an online image search, the first page is dominated by Einstein)

       


Are Sotheby’s moving

with the trans times?

I guess not, that’s probably an old-fashioned jacket,

not a short skirt.

 

(Sotheby’s, Mayfair, London)

 


This looks like

a dangerously drippy place to stand.

But what is life

if you never take a risk?

 

(Waterloo, London)


I didn't know that Arb

had been canonized:

who'd have thought that making coffee

could get you so far?

 

(Warren Street, London. Kerning is the typographical process of adjusting the spacing between characters. Sometimes there are restrictions.)  


                     

What I like

about the 440 page

‘Fish Hooks of the Pacific Islands’

is that it's Volume Two.

 

(Thomas Heneage booksshop, Piccadilly, London)

  


Here is the puddle zone

well on the way –

stop right now, rain! –

to becoming a flood.



Hose-woman bows

her nozzle head:

I’m flattered,

and slightly surprised.

 

(Burgh House, Hampstead, London)

 


‘Where’, I'm inclined to ask grass

‘is your backbone?’

And what kind of excuse is

'not needing one’?

 

(Windy riverside, Greenwich, London)



The already-pleasure 

of parking for free 

is nudged a touch higher

by knowing that there used to be a charge.


(Lymington New Forest Hospital)

  

Rampant kingdomism

continues to deny plantae

the decent depth of burial

routinely afforded animalia.

 

(Hiller’s Arboretum, Hampshire: who can doubt the bias in how we treat the five kingdoms, with Animalia, Plantae and Fungi respected in that order, followed by Monera and Protista)

 

It’s one thing

to grow up as the odd one out,

another to be odd

without the prospect of change.

 

(Public convenience, Lymington)


 


This strikes me as a pipe worth smoking

Until the chance arises

I shall stick with abnegation:

even vapes have yet to tempt me.

 

(Farringdon, London)

 

 

This is how you walk the path

Ignore the night.

Follow the instructions.

Reach the gated distance and you're done.



The ivy’s flowered

brighter and sooner, and faded faster,

than I have ever seen before -

and I’ve known sixty springs…



I have my doubts

Is scrubbing away the yellow line

really sufficient

to free up your parking?


(Paddington, London)

 


It's a long-established trick

Dash in, take the credit,

turn round sharp

and walk straight out.


 (Walpole Park, Ealing, London)



The longest snake I've ever seen

 is writhing here.

You need to be careful:

the head could be anywhere.


(Pitzhanger Manor, Ealing, London)

 


It’s hard to say

if the hat is flattering

or simply a practical means

of shutting out the world of delay.

(Southampton-London train: this passenger appeared dozily unfazed by our running 50 minutes late)


 

People prefer to go

over a bridge.

Water is happy enough

going under.



It's easier to catch rain

in a bucket then in a photo:

it needs to be pretty-much bucketing down

to make enough pictorial impression.

 

(Southampton)

 


Are we paying for holes?

Or is that rendered immaterial

by how much space is always present

at the subatomic level?

 

(Sourdough bread is certainly prone to gaps. That said, nearly everything is emptiness: if you take account of the space between the electrons of an atom, 99.9999999% of us – or bread – is space)


 

X marks the spots

though it’s fair to point out

that everywhere else

is also recording the rain.

 

(Peckham, London)

 


Hang on a second!

That may be

a bit too slow. 

Moments also have their limits.

 

(Closed coffee shop enjoining us to slow down - Peckham, London)

 

Don't fuss!

Just get your head down.

What does gratitude

cost you, after all?

 

(Deptford, London)


 


AND

is only part of a word

from which little can be deduced

about what came next and

 

(Peckham, London)

 

This is how

the solar system looks from Peckham:

the substance of the sun

having been eaten.

 

(Peckham, London)

  


Here you might buy

your vibrato or masturbat,

yr lub, yr sxy unds.

But I wdn’t trust their condos.

 

(Southampton)




If plastic bottles were plastic flowers

and plastic flowers were allowed by the rules

this wouldn’t get far, nevertheless,

in a gardening competition.

 

(Southampton)


   

‘At the moment

ATMs are useless, sorry,

and the more I spend, the less I have.

Ask tomorrow, maybe I'll get paid.’

 

(Automated Teller Machine, Clerkenwell, London. Not to mention the heater...)

 

 


Life isn't simple

You can't expect

an automatic fit:

this is as close as you’re likely to get.

 

(Mayfair, London)

 


Why should I trust that man at all?

For all I know 

he's fallen rather gravely ill

since they put the advert up.

 

(Kensington, London: David Gady is considered perhaps the leading male fashion ‘supermodel’, though I admit I hadn’t heard of him before I saw him stating in this advert how he's 'always trusted Wellman')

 


The splashbird

leaves a distinctive track -

consistent with dragging its well-webbed feet,

reluctant to accept that they’re not in water.

 

(Mayfair, London)

 

 

 

This may not be shit creek

this may not quite be a paddle,

but there may be a comparable problem

unless it has been cast aside by a one-legged cyclist.

 

(Kensington, London)

 

 


This is an unfiltered view

of Exhibition Road:

you can't call a phone box up-to-date technology

in the context of an edit.

 

(Kensington, London)


The Dutch

seem to favour stickerfiti:

spraycans are going

a little too far…


(Amsterdam)





 You won’t find a world

without grit.

The academic question being 

Whether you would want one…

 

(Schiedam)

 

I worry

that my worry lines

have started to outweigh my smile –

and then I worry that that will make them worse.

 

(Rotterdam)

 


You can tell the time

from the groundlights here – 

or you could,

were any of them set correctly. 

 

(Rotterdam)

 


The fundamental error here -

climbing on the outside of the building –

made worse by the fact that

there are only four proper footholds.

 

 (Rotterdam: work by Daan Botlek – ‘Make it Happen’, 2017)



How did this work?

Why would you lay a pavement

that doesn't fit? Or build a wall  

that squashes the pavement up?

 

(Rotterdam)

                          

There comes a point

when the only purpose of light bulbs

seems to be to light up themselves.

That's when you turn them off. 

 

(Den Haag Centraal Train Station)



Now that I'm old

I see the new as nothing more

than age in the waiting room.

It won't be all that long.

 

(Schiedam)

 


I don’t want to seem ungrateful

but who needs eight pillows,

especially when they’re all too fat?

Maybe I do want to seem ungrateful…

 

(Bilderberg Parkhotel, Rotterdam)


 


Can it really be

that the paper,

not the act

is the focus of attention here?


(Stedelijk Museum Schiedam)

 




Has this street got above itsel?

What justified the elevation

from brick-plain Scots

to the fluted  fantoosheries of Ancient Greece?

 

(Euston, London: 'Drummond' is a habitational name from several Scots towns. ‘Itsel’ and ‘fantoosherie’ (flashiness / pretentiousness) are Scots words. ‘Doric’ is ‘the ancient Greek dialect of the Dorians’ as well as ‘relating to or denoting a classical order of architecture characterized by a sturdy fluted column and a thick square abacus resting on a rounded moulding’)

 

Help me please!

My walls are crumbling, the roof is overloaded,

I fear the log fire is out of control -

and I have no funds to put disaster right!

 

(Mayfair, London)

 


We may have found our winner

in the contest for maximum drippage.

I just hope

no message was intended.

 

(Victoria, London)




The Box Bird’s nests

appear in April –

sometimes early, sometimes late,

I’ve often wondered why…

 

(Since Easter happens on the Sunday following the Paschal Full Moon (i.e. the ecclesiastical full moon of the northern spring), it can fall on any date between March 22 and April 25)

 

 


Christmas is over

The only presents to be given now

are trees to the streets

who may not even want them.


(London / Brussels, late January 2024) 



            

 

It's all very well

to say they're out of date round here,

but how many current Belgian bands

get to play in London, after all?


(Brussels, 2024: both The Human League and UB40 had their hits in the early 1980's)




The birds of Brussels

just about scrape by,

dodging the rubbish to nest in plant pots.

It’s surprising they grow to such sizes.


(Vanderkindere, Brussels) 




The Belgians

love their dogs

but do the dogs

love Belgium?


(Brussels) 



Blue people to the left

Red people to the right.

Surrealists,

carry right on.

(Brussels - the city of Magritte - is strongly associated with the convention-defying surrealist movement) 


      


Call yourself

a tree,

you twig-weak failure to take up space?

At least your father could stand up for himself.


(Brussels) 



Beware

of leaving your car boot open:

who knows who’ll steal a photo

or even a bottle of water…


(Brussels) 



Love can be

as delicate as a feather.

Love can be

as base as a drain.

 (Brussels)



Behind the eyes

behind the windows

behind the trees…

Thoughts.


 (Brussels)



I don't see windows

I see lives made visible

by the lack of visibility

that means they need extra light.

(Brussels)



 

The concrete fence

that pretended to be wood

didn’t even think about how hard it would be

for a wooden fence to pretend to be concrete. 


(Brussels)

That’s quite a contraption!

I’m hoping

to be strobed to sleep

but it doesn’t quite happen.

 

(Belgrove Hotel, London)

  


This looks too vulnerable

to be out in public - 

doesn't the pinkness

belong on the inside?

 

(Bethnal Green, London)

 

 


The Imposter Syndrome 

can rear its head anywhere.

But I say: 

let's make  difference our friend.

 

(Cambridge Heath. London)



 

       


It’s not itself the biggest news

but I went in here to buy a paper,

believing logic on my side -

and found they didn't sell them.


(Bishopsgate, London)

      

Don't get me wrong   

Trees have their merits

but lamp posts, they light up the world

and know the right way to behave around pavements.

 

(Cambridge Heath, London)



 I love the practicality!

The daily puzzling

over which foot is which

made so much easier!

 

(Whitechapel Underground Station, London)



I’m touched

by how tenderly –

even though down to a less-than-stump slice -

the big tree cradles its diminutive friend.

 

(Clissold Park, London)



It was a matter of honour 

to abandon this book 

in public disgrace. 

I swear I didn’t read a single word.

 

(Manor House, London)

  


At least it's dark 

But how would you like 

to have your inners exposed 

to any passing fetishist of circuits? 


(Manor House, London)

 


 

‘Bollocks to bullocks’

reads the  360°

feedback from their neighbours,

understandably provoked by the noise and smell.

 

(Fitzrovia, London)

 


The winter sun

is low enough to make me wonder:

is it really

93 million miles up? 


(Redbridge, Southampton)

 

        

I remember 

when it would have mattered 

that a telephone box had been smashed up

and you couldn't call in to report it.

 

(Manor House, London)


 

This isn’t the sort of handbag

that’s worth more than its contents.

What I’d take for a grin

becomes a grimace.

(Manor House, London)



 

The X’s

act as indicators,

just in case you fail to spot

that the pavement’s been repaired. 


(Mayfair, London)

 


        


Where to walk?  

Unable to reach the ceiling,

I pondered the balance required for the handrail.

Then I saw the footmarks and all was clear.


(South Kensington Tube Station, London)






Want to stack a tower block

on a van

on a car?

I suggest you cheat.

 

(Redbridge, Southampton)


 


Here is normality

reflecting normality to such an extent

that I’m starting to think

it's abnormal.

 

(Southampton)


 

Having complained about getting no bin bags

I was almost disappointed, when they arrived,

to find that all our neighbours

had been given some too.

 

(I say ‘almost’, because - of course – the good fortune of others should not diminish our own. Consider, for example, the parable of Jesus and the vineyard workers… Matthew 20: 1–16)





 

I didn't expect

to be brought the wrong order

and maybe I wasn't

but I did have the thought.

 

(Trusty Servant Inn, Minstead)



Christmas in the countryside

appears pretty gloomy:

look how down in the tinsel mouth

this Landrover seems to be!


(Minstead)




This curtain of light

is a trick of just that. 

And makes it no easier

To peek through and in...

 

(Mayfair, London)


 


Barrier post 

is not a bad job

apart from the meaningless waiting around

for the meaningful waiting around to begin.


(Saatchi Gallery, London)


    

Even if

you wrap yourself against the world

and stand as still as possible,

time will not stop passing.


(Sloane Square, London)


 


Pickpockets swear by them

Nimble fingers multiplied

beyond the dreams of even

the most mephistophelian pianist.


(Saatchi Gallery, London)


            


Were I not only naked

but suffering from excess shine

and a really bad case of Slice’s Disease

I'd be sweating, too.


(Statue, South Bank Centre, London - Klaus Weber: 'Peacock')


                 


This is no Christmas tree!

We must not give the clandar

precedence

over the species…


(Waterloo, London)

 

 

What's the difference

between a fuck and a shag?

A shag is rather like a cormorant,

whereas a fuck is rather like a shag.

 

(that’s a shag on the left, a cormorant on the right. What led me to this? I'm sorry, I haven't a clue.)

About Me

My photo
Southampton, Hampshire, United Kingdom
I was in my leisure time Editor at Large of Art World magazine (which ran 2007-09) and now write freelance for such as Art Monthly, Frieze, Photomonitor, Elephant and Border Crossings. I have curated 20 shows during 2013-17 with more on the way. Going back a bit my main writing background is poetry. My day job is public sector financial management.

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