Haiku:
The Sun
The fiery sun burns
Bitumen melts underfoot
Tomatoes glow red
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
Haiku:
The Sun
The fiery sun burns
Bitumen melts underfoot
Tomatoes glow red
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
The Weekly Prompt, Photo prompt is : Fences.. Across the road from my home, there’s a large housing development, under construction with a high wire fence around the site. It’s in vast contrast to my private little yard here. I’m on my exercise bike, Yorkie, pedalling away and looking around at my courtyard fence. I’m wondering, how I got this far and how I arrived at this place, jumping all of life’s tall fences on my to journey here. On my courtyard fence hangs so many memories, and it takes me back to when I wrote a poem, of when life was extraordinarily hard and I felt the end was near, it was just after I had my first Stroke eighteen years ago, and I couldn’t jump “This Fence”<< Click to view the Weekly Prompt’s site

This Fence
I am quickly nearing this fence.
An obstacle of a lifetime I see.
And from my side of this fence,
The hurdle is too high for me.
And on the other side of this fence,
There seems nowhere to land or flee.
I have arrived at this fence,
Above the pickets, just grey sky.
And on my side of this fence,
The grass is brown and dry.
On the other side of this fence,
The grass is green, but still I cry.
How am I to clear this fence,
There seems nowhere to go, or get by.
This fence, all built of stones,
Breaks my spirit, and all my bones.
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
A glorious day was had by all yesterday, at one Australia’s biggest multicultural events. These days the festival is organised by Diversitat and has grown into Victoria’s largest free multi-arts and cultural party. Some things remain the same. Pako is about community and is led by community. The event celebrates and highlights the extraordinary contribution of individuals, cultural groups and multicultural communities in Geelong and across Australia. During the day, over 100,000 people attended, 5,000 people took part in the street parade and 10,000 people performed on five stages. I managed to take a few photos that may give you an idea of the friendly atmosphere enjoyed by the huge crowd








Ivor Steven (c) 2019
Haiku:
A Street Festival
Festa of nations
Multicultural Colours
Together and free
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
I was catching a bus home this afternoon, as per normal, after my walk down Pakington St. However, mistakenly I caught the wrong bus !! I looked up, and I did not see the sign. In the long process of hopping on a couple of different buses, I eventually found my way home. During my time of the extra bus trips, I came up with the words of this poem.
Sorry, We Caught The Wrong Bus
Is this the air I breathe
A misty haze out in front of me
Is this the sky I see
A big smoggy Vee
High in the mountain plains, flowerless, without bees
Miles of burnt-out wasteland and no trees
Beyond the eroded soils, there’s the earth’s oceans
Mercury settled deep, with a topping of dead fish by the millions
Is this black bitumen I walk on
Long oily tar, rolled out by the ton
Is this real water I drink
Manufactured I sip, on my knees I do sink
Mother nature, please forgive us
We did not know, sorry, we caught the wrong bus
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
A sincere thank you to Efi, of EfiSoul63, << please click, to view her site, for being the inspiration behind my poem, and our mutual love of the sea
To Kiss The Sea
I wish to be at the beach and free
Saltwater and sand are out of reach for me
Oh, to be sunbathing and swimming
To be in the surf, playing and frolicking
I’m close enough to breathe the nearness of the sea
Just across the sand dunes and through the tea-tree
I wish to be under the sea
Rolling with the waves crashing above me
Swirling and unfurling
Bubbling and frothing
I’m close enough to hear the evening sea-mist
Just outside my window, I feel the bliss of the sea’s kiss
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
Dig and smash
Turn-over and break
Do the digging again
More bashing and crashing
Split up the lumps
Turn-over and over
Beat the hard pieces finer
Crush the broken dirt, if you must
Water the soil, and then feed
Rotate again, and again
Until the patch is pliable and moist
Come back tomorrow
Or even the next day, on trust
The garden spot is ready
For a tree to be planted
A gift to mother nature’s life

Ivor Steven (c) 2019
The poet’s studio, is now the little litter part of my bedroom
A paper tiger’s haven, has become a messy grotto
I mean to roar it’s, uncomfortably untidy
Pieces of paper and cardboard kites
Scatter the room like confetti
Autumn leaves of the old poet’s pen
Scribbled words yet to be encoded
Foolscap overwritten and smudged
Out-lined by white-out corrections
Undefined and unlisted
Out of focus and twisted
Upside down and inside out
Uncategorized to the extreme
My disorganised dreamscape’s haven,
Looking like a moonscape’s junkyard
Here the poet’s rustic pen has been the ruler
Showing no regard for my bedroom’s demeanour
Three months since the mighty sword has cleaned-up
Blarney and Baloney, I do confess
I’m sleeping covered in my hurdy gurdy verses
I cannot see under these printed alien addresses
It’s time, to dispel my dream’s curses
Free myself of all wasted jabberwocky guilt
Let my alien poetry regenerate and begin anew
Ivor Steven (c) 2019
I wrote this poem last night, when I woke up at 1.30am. The featured image above, is looking up at the Geelong hills north of the town, they are called the “You Yangs”. I suppose my poem below is about, how our politicians, should look up , to see what’s coming down on their heads. This post is for the Weekly Prompt, Photo Challenge: Up <<Click on, to view The Weekly Prompt site…..
Feeding Them Up On Bullets Instead
How hard must we hit the nail
On their heads
Before the white house wooden hearts
Finally count the living-dead
How hard does the rain have to fall
On their heads
Before the farmer’s empty buckets
Only fill via tears from the living-dead
How hard shall the sunshine burn
On their heads
Before the number of extinct birds
Light-up the dark gap between government heads
How hard do crumbling icebergs break
On their heads
Before both polar ice-caps melt
Flooding our storage silos and sheds
The answer my friends, rests
On their heads
Before all the starving arise from earthen beds
Crying out, stop feeding us up on bullets instead
Words, Between the Lines Of Age . Neil Young. Lyrics
Someone and someone were down by the pond
Looking for something to plant in the lawn.
Out in the fields they were turning the soil
I’m sitting here hoping this water will boil
When I look through the windows and out on the road
They’re bringing me presents and saying hello.
Singing words, words between the lines of age.
Words, words between the lines of age.
If I was a junk-man selling you cars,
Washing your windows and shining your stars,
Thinking your mind was my own in a dream
What would you wonder and how would it seem?
Living in castles a bit at a time
The king started laughing and talking in rhyme.
Singing words, words between the lines of age.
Words, words between the lines of age.
Ivor Steven (c) 2019