The Sands of Salcombe | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | We camped year upon year For a fortnight, With parental foresight, On the bog-standard farm That never changed hands Behind North Sands, In my father’s half-rent army tents. We held hands around the camp fire Listening to the bands of scouts Singing ever so dire, And ran to the public loo by the beach Whenever that option was in reach. Brod and I played a silly bat and ball game On the silvery sands, to public disdain, And we all took a dinghy too far Along Tennyson’s mystical bar And over to Sandy Cove Where pirates once roved.
Daddy liked to drive us In his rundown Hillman Over the steep hill to South Sands Where the Salcombe ferry lands And the beach looks like Looe. Not bad for a lower middle class, bullshitting crew.
Then the bleeding, throat-scorching walk To the weird country house at Overbecks. What a heck of a hex! And onwards to lofty Bolt Head, Where the Herzogin Cecilie went aground And Mum and Dad once played around In the rigging, only kissing not frigging.
Back on the camp site, The wasps and the Morris dancers Were in full swing. A mellow fellow nicked me with his stick Ting a ling ting! My head went ding, And I felt like going ping When a bee stung my nose with a zing. Brod sneered, with a wease, And said, for a tease, ‘It serves you right, you freaky weakie, You’re so focking dumb, And a very silly Tommy Wommy to boot.’ What a hoot!
I returned as a corpulent Imperial College maths student To toil in the Tides Reach Near the southerly beach. Through the neurotic haze Of misshapen youth, I saw ghosts warped from the past, And felt uncouth, And ever so sad That I’d turned out so bad. What a strange lad!
| | | | Tom (right) with his brother on the North Sands campsite in about 1954 | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013 |
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The Flying Windmill | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Dedicated to a Dutch windmill destroyed by Allied Forces in 1944 | | Faster than sound, Faster than light, Hurtle my sails, through day and night Faster than the fastest Japanese bullet train Faster than spaceships trading in grain Faster than the Psychons in the acid rain. With my granite jaws I devour, The maize, the wheat, and the rye, And grind them into flour, While I fly across God’s sky For reasons heaven knows why.
And now I am the Federation’s artillery marker For their attack on the Vulcans From the Planet Darthlarker And the nefarious Klingons From the depths of Lukedarker.
What a proud, prestigious honour! But Neptune wept, I’m a goner! Which bloody fool blew me to smithereens, Like James the Second and his silly marines, Like a Dalek with twisted genes?
It was Captain Crassus Carrotneep, Who objected to my creaky noise While they was trying to snooze and sleep. And now I’m lost without poise In the Klag marsh ever so deep.
(Includes five lines from a poem written by the author at Sutton High School, Plymouth when he was 12) | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013 |
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| | | The Blue Preying Mantis | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | It appeared during my dear Hypatia’s wedding Man-size by the pulpit, Prancing in prayer-like posture, Its dark green pseudopupils bulging Out wide From its bulbous compound eyes, Its spiky forelegs grasping The sacred Book of Kells, Flashing its leathery outer wings And revealing The four meaner things behind. ‘I’m Bishop Galloway,’ it cried, Even though His Grace had gone away to hide. ‘Not the blue preying mantis!’ I shrieked. The worthy canon was confounded, The kilted best man turned around, The youthful ushers ran up with a bound, And I was bundled into the Lady Chapel Where they gave me a rough grapple And throttled my Adam’s Apple. Thereupon, Hypatia happily married Damian Attended by the Rose Gang from Granton And an alsatian.
It appeared in the Havana Just as the schemy Aussie From Sydney with a single kidney Was trying to get off like a toff With a bent Dorothy from Tranent Who wasn’t exactly heaven sent. It tried to pull tricks without feeling, Its sensors scraping the ceiling, Its reptilian jaws munching the treats With a surfeit of crunching.
‘Not the blue preying mantis!’ I shrieked, And two hefty bouncers from Saturn’s Rings Ran in, with jagged scars on their faces, And threw me headlong onto the street.
It appeared in the respected Professorial Ward, While Dr. Heinrich Vespasian was on his rounds. It was leaping like a cricket, Scampering like a cockroach, Ever keen to encroach On my King Gadeon broach.
‘Not the blue preying mantis!’ I shrieked, And two ginormous prop forwards sped in. ‘Yank him, jag him, and make him do the splits!’ Snorted the kindly consultant from Auschwitz. The guys from Hawick ground my face into the floor, Koshed me with flupentixol, Threw me into windowless, furnitureless solitary, And locked the cast iron door. What a way to jag a philanthropic young stag! Thank goodness they didn’t acuphase me with clopixol. Rat attacks are a snip compared with painful palpitations And mind-bending heart attacks.
Their witches’ brew paralysed me waist-down And put me on crutches. So they switched me to modecate, With an occasional pill of Largactil. Now, after eleven years of scorching sunstroke, Sleepness nights and scary days, Red multiple scar tissue a posteriori, And prolonged painful erections a priori I chase after every lady in sight, And heavily salivate While I give them a fright. I’m the blue preying mantis, Who returned in the night.
| | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013
The Dancer in the Pink Tutu | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | ‘Ding Dong’ cried the dancer in the pink tutu, Flourishing his arms in bird-like disarray. ‘It’s time for the cabaret. So smell your rosebuds while you may, And come merrily on your way.’ ‘Ding Dong’ he cried, Rubbing his fat belly. ‘Don’t even squeak on your Nelly, But come and compose, While I repose, Or I will dispose of your guts in disarray.’ ‘Ding Dong’, he cried, Fawning up to lithe Lilith, Come and sink your teeth Into literary works of merit Which we will all inherit.’ ‘Ding Dong’, he cried, Flourishing his pink tutu, ‘Fill me with life anew, And read me your gut-wrenching stories, While I retch and spew.’ ‘Ding Dong,’ he cried, As he most ignominiously died After getting tossed and fried. ‘Tootoo, tootoo, and tootoo to you. I always know when to take my cue.’ | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, March 2013 |
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| The Gauntlet | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | She spread her wings from Devonport Dock, And headed like the Mayflower Rose Down the jam-packed Hamoaze, ’Cross the ever pounding Sound T’wards the Mewstone Rock; A victor in the Tall Ships race, Fully forty feet from stern to prow With quite sharp a pace through the dizzy space And the subtlety and grace of an Arabian dhow. ‘Turnabout, not whirl about, you bleary land lubbers!’ Cried Captain Malcolm Macey, Who was dressed to look quite racy. I successfully ratcheted my sheet As Dad and Brod took the heat, And the Gauntlet t’wards Cawsand twisted, Narrowly missed the harrowing breakwater By an inch and a quarter, And headed into open water. ‘Top ho’!’ cried Lieutenant Martin Jago, As the H.M.S. Illustrious led the incoming queue From territories old and new. ‘Jibe to the larboard!’ yelled our cap’n, To avert the Brazen in full spurt. I ducked the swinging boom, Narrowly avoiding my ill-fated doom, And away we zoomed Through the lofty waves T’wards the Eddystone light Like a bunch of knaves Escaping out of sight. ‘Take the tiller, Tommy,’ Smirked Captain Macey, ‘While I make us each a round With spam and hard cheese, None too fresh But well ground.’ I blushed and flushed Like Noel’s right royal Nancy, While I steered the Gauntlet According to my fancy, And we towards the Cornish coast veered And flew by Looe without a clue, While Neville the dumb Macey stood and leered Nervously glancing at his papa most feared. A storm blew up, And grew into a gale Of force well exceeding nine, Tempestuous and not at all benign, ‘We’ll take refuge in Fowey,’ Cried Malcolm Macey, Taking the helm, As the waves o’er the gun’ale crashed, And I to the near vertical deck was stashed. When we ran the Gauntlet into our safe haven, Lieutenant Jago pouted, and shouted, ‘Let me rev up the engines, Cap’n,’ ‘No chance,’ spouted Macey. ‘We’ll give them a show, And tack in ’gainst the flow. We’re Her Majesty the Queen’s Royal Navy You should by now well know Even if you’re bred out of the arsenic mine in Mary Tavy.’ And all the pixies stood and applauded As we approached the harbourside quay While I was longing for a pee, And I felt personally lauded. ‘Everybody pile in,’ Cried Martin Jago, Lowering our remarkably small skiff. In jumped Brod, As stiff as a rod, Followed by Dad Looking fit to do bad. Thereupon Macey’s bloated dimwit came crashing downward And sank the skiff with all hands aboard. ‘It’s time for a drink,’ Said our cap’n, When they’d pulled the sad crew out of their mire Looking half bent and quite dire. So off to the Pirates’ Ship we went And sipped mulled wine by the friendly fire. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013 |
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Flying By Queasy Jet | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Fly direct by Queasy Jet; It’s easy by sleazy jet. Join the élite set With people you’ve never met. You bet they’re putting you in a sweat. Amelia Marilia was heading for Mothecombe sands To scatter her slothful Daddy’s ashes To the tune of heavenly bands Where the tide dashes, lashes, and flashes, And smashes while it crashes. The plane spiralled through the sky And wobbled in the ozone While Amelia was listening to Boyzone, As sick as a bozo hoping to die, And swearing never again to fly. ‘We’re diverting to Bristol Because of the bog-like fog in Exeter, And whatever and etcetera,’ Cried the pilot, doughty Crystal, While she was zooming over the Black Country Swearing at all and sundry. ‘What a fark for a lark,’ Exclaimed Amelia Marilia, Burying her dead Daddy’s ashes In the soggy boggy woggy, ‘It’s plastic for that spastic And good riddance for me Fiddledy dee!’ | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013
In Praise of Thomas Tallis | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | |
| | Salve intemerata virgo; Ave rosa sine spinis; Ave Dei patris filia; La Vièrge Marie est sanctifié en musique, Et le jeune Thomas était l’artiste interprète, The youth with the whole world at his feet. Hail, pure virgin Mary; Hail, rose without thorns, Hail, most noble daughter of God the father. Thomas blesses you in music, And, while never prosaic, Emulates you in life mosaic. Gaude gloriosa Der Mater; Puer natus est nobis, Et filus datus is est nobis. The Queen is exalted, By the son who is born to us. The Roman rite is restored, All praise to the blessed Mother of God And the Anglican liturgy is, for a moment, shod. Boy lover of the jousting Sir William, Obsequious to the English Caligula; Husband of the faithful Joan, And peepholed by her dead sister, Tallis would live to serve Elizabeth the Great. Queen Mary? He never missed her. Nine psalm chants for four voices, The Lamentations of Jeremiah. Jerusalem remembers all the precious things That were hers from days of old, As Thomas celebrates for us The triumphant tales untold. He never put faith in any but you, oh God of Israel; Spem in alium was a fine motet, ‘If you love me’, a fine bouquet. Author of this blessed memory, Sound divine praises with melodious graces! Office hymns, works from Liturgy, in full array How wonderful the day. As he dyd lyve, fully four score years, So also did he dy, In myld and quyet sort (O lucky, happy man!) To God ful oft for mercy did he cry, Whereas he lyves, let deth do what he can. I’ll love your youthful soul, Thomas Tallis, And the ghosts defy. Composer’s Note: The first five lines of the last stanza are based on the last four lines of Ye Sacred Muses by William Byrd. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, March 2013 |
| St. Agnes Steve | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | St. Agnes Eve, ah bitter chill it was; Aleidh, for all her plumes and feathers, was acold, And reassuredly on the purple pill, When into the Fifian field she strolled. Recalling the Gaelic myth of old, She threw a handful of grain into the scant cattle fold. ‘Agnes sweet, Agnes nubile, Agnes fair, Agnes with your thighs so bare,’ She cooed, and mooed, As the owls sped through the midnight air, ‘Hither, wither, now repair; Fragrant Agnes dear, let me see The bonny lad who is to lie with me. You can hanker in; Have no fear. We will make a likely pair When we venture where The timeless Twins of Trimontium seldom dare. A bovine hulk in a green dress (What an unadulterated mess!) Appeared like a vision in Dr. Who, As if by nuclear fission, By the old ash tree In doubtful harmony. ‘I’m Danny the Trannie’ He boldly declared, ‘And I’m here to give you a Kirkcaldy whammy. Just creep under the white curl bush While I give you a Dalgety push.’ Sod off!’ shrieked Aleidh, in distressed disarray, Hurrying out of her endangered way. ‘I’m a fine Catholic lady, And I’m ahome to my four poster bed. Begone before I see bright purple and red!’ At that, the voluptuous vision did a vault And a triple split stag somersault, And landed on an inquisitive colt. Not wishing to admit defeat, Aleidh, feeling less than replete, Tossed away her flowers, In the wee small hours, Stripped and skinny dipped In her sizzling hot tub, And gave herself a sensuous rub. Then away, without supper or snack, to bed, And gave herself a smack, Hoping that another ancient superstition Would come to a head With a fancily fruitful fruition. As she lay on her foxhair mattress Anticipating fond duress, With her dainty hands under her fluffy pillow And her feline legs as shaky as a willow, She peered at the wide heavens, Without looking behind her, As Jack Keats would’ve taught her, Like a lamb approaching the slaughter, Forever of God the daughter.
‘I’m Steve Porphyro from Crieff, And I don’t want to give you unduly gratuitous grief,’ Declared a buxom boss-eyed buck, Flexing his bristling burly biceps As if from Crete in a superlatively Sapphoian dream. ‘May I squeeze your thrice blessed beautifully blended breasts, My brash baby bonny bizzom, Without creating a senseless schism?’ ‘Yes please,’ shrieked Aleidh, in delight, Spreading her legs out wide, As if she had no parts to hide, ‘And then your mighty manhood to my rare rosebud show. Please try to go quenchingly quick and ponderously slow.’
And so the lush wench from Largs was thrice well laid that night. Neither a fantastical fantasy Nor a dippy dream, But at times a frantic fight. Then she lay abed in delicious delight Until the cock did thrice capriciously crow. I’ve been a senselessly silly scamp, she grinned, I know! Pel Porphyro was a slum landlord in Crieff, Sometimes cruel and often a thief. ‘Come into my palatial parlour,’ He declared with considerable ardour. ‘Now you my son’s proud wife will be While I give you gifts and treasure And adore you beyond measure.’ ‘But I’m a fine Catholic lady,’ Shrieked Aleidh, in disharmony, ‘And I’ll nae be a tart for the likes of ye. Take a hike to Killiecrankie. I’m aways home for my tea.’ ‘Put her in a crate And take her to Kate’s For all to infuriate And some to satiate. Make her quake, hump her, and dump her. I forsake her!’ Yelled Pel, like an Orcadian monster. So off to the whorehouse They dragged her, Where the pimps tagged and ragged her. But each time a man tried to make her, She called upon St. Agnes to save her, And the duff vanished in a puff of green smoke Without ever a croak.
‘Drive the obstinate peach to Kirkcaldy beach, And turn her and burn her, Yelled Pel, in a mighty rage, Not sounding fit to engage. ‘She deserves the fate of her pious Agnes, For pursuing this madness.’ But when they drenched her with petrol And set a light to her dress, A magical wave swept in Through the sewage on the portage And saved her from further duress. ‘Thank you, my blessed Saint, ‘For saving me from your holy fate,’ She declared, though quite unprepared As Pel rushed up with an axe, And lopped off her head, Just as our good Lord struck him stone dead. As their blood rushed and mingled, The hound dogs curdled and tingled. When Steve scurried up, looking quite naïve, He was utterly peeved. Sad Steve did grieve for many years thereafter, Downing gin and sin, And snorting Charlies with the harpies, Before hitting the rafters.
The composer would like to thank Thomas Tsartsidis, who is writing a Ph.D. thesis about Christian martyrs, for suggesting the St. Agnes theme. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, April 2013 |
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Chess.com | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Prawn to King Four Opened ‘Mishzucchini’ from Singapore, Clearly hoping for the Ruy Lopez or the Guico Piano And a Capablanca-style virtuoso. After painting my eyelashes purple and pink, (As ever the Glesca scouse!) And admiring the tiny picture of the darling dear of a twink, I, proud ‘Fartyartykink’, clicked my mouse, Transposed the wench into the French Built a trench around my king, And made her queen go ding-a-ling-ling. She tried to rook me, and to hook me With a cunning knight move to the right, But I forked the dork and And put the porky joker to flight. Then, with a black bishop fianchetto, I caught her king in its ghetto, Forced a delightful checkmate, And laughed uproariously at her fate. Eight more points and three complimentary joints! Flashed a message on my Toshiba screen, And my 1201 Chess. com rating made me preen. Would I my long lost 2150 FIDE rating once again achieve Or would I flounder like naive old Uncle Steve? 332 ten minute blitz games later I thought I was revisiting my alma mater When I crushed ‘Smartpeachblossom’ from Argentina, To the tune of my concertina, With my closed Sicilian which is worth a billion. When the Smart Alec saw my Alekhine’s gun (Rook, rook and queen piled On the same file!) He knew he was done.
A 1707 Chess.com rating, no less, After all that angst and duress; Visions of pummelling a grandmaster While moving faster and faster. But while playing ‘Kissblarney’ from Ireland, I experienced disaster unforeseen And turned beetroot and green. While trying to snatch his rook, My mouse glitched on my queen and Dropped her into the leprechaun’s nook. Forsooth! She with a gleeful bishop’s pawn was took. After many more foul ups and silly balls ups And zwischenzugs going awry, I was stricken with a stye in my eye While my rating went bye bye, And, feeling like a dim-witted kook, Chess.com I forever forsook. | |
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| © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, May 2013 | |
| The Garden and The Lake | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Dedicated to Thomas | | I live in a garden Surrounded by a wooden trellis Where the flowers address my stress, The weeds fulfil my needs, The tatties turn into fratties, And the trees keep me at ease. Friendship is like a lake; The ripplets foster harmony, The currents create destiny, The waves cause dialogue, And the fish complete A dish perfectly replete. When the lake flows into my rose garden, My cup floweth over with due pardon. When my friends come to tea, I feel like Zebedee. And then it’s time for bed, Magic sleepyhead! | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, May 2013 |
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The Sprite of Sharpitor | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Daddy drove Mummy, Violet, his kept woman, Mollie the Collie, and us, In his green Hillman, Behind the green Tavistock bus, Out beyond Rob’rough, Still keeping relatively sober, Past the dippy A.A. man, Who stared at us like a very green Plymouth Argyle fan, ’Cross the crazy clattering cattle grid, Which didn’t cost a dime or a quid, And out onto the brown and green Moor. Oh, what an eternal bore! The picnic with the ponies And a couple of Violet’s cronies, And the freezing cold swim at Cadover Were enough to bowl me over. Then Daddy whacked Brod, For calling him a silly cod And laughing when he hurt his bod. While Brod’s head was still ringing and swinging, I started carol singing, And when Mummy served up the chicken, I kept licken and licken. Meantime Violet Kewish Was behavin’ remarkably shrewish, While Daddy was acting up mulish And Brod was looking exceedingly foolish. Then off for a traipse around the half blown-away Yelverton Rock, As a Spitfire zoomed over the ancient runway While Molly teased the sheep and taunted the flock, And I performed the Saltarello my way. ‘Let’s climb Sharpitor!’ cried Brod, The wretched, bullying sod, ‘I want to catch slow worms under the stones, And make a Druids’ cross with the sheeps’ bones, Though the vipers make me very hyper. Particularly when they sting me up my Khyber.’ So through Dousland did we go, While Brod tickled me like a dim-witted gigolo, And we climbed the triple breasted tor Overhanging the lake at stupendous Burrator Until we could see the Eddystone Light Way beyond the distant shore, Saving the seamen from eternal blight, Helping the blessed Mother of God Her struggle against the evil forces of nature to fight. As I approached the summit, A magical fairy leapt out from under a rock, Bounced on a granite block, And landed with a plummet. ‘I am the Sprite of Sharpitor’, did she declare, ‘And I’m here to inquire how you fare. You are a much put upon laddie, But you could turn into an inspiring mannie.’ ‘They call me a cruel poof at Mudstone High,’ I wailed. ‘Even though I wouldn’t hurt a fly. They crush snails in my pockets, Their eyes blazing through their sockets. They hide my trousers up the chimney during gym And subject me to their every whim. They attack me with blades And pursue me through the hues and shades On the endless Marsh Mills glades. And as for Giles Snitchy, That narcoleptic Narcissus couldn’t be more bitchy When I finally thumped the creepy-crawly sneak in the mouth He reacted like a bleeding scouse And scurried to the prefects like a snitchy mouse, For me to beg vain mercy from the cane. But I will triumph by focussing on my chemistry, maths and physics, And appealing to the spirits and the mystics.’ ‘Childhood experiences are given to us from above,’ said the Sprite, ‘To mould character and put us in the right, So we may throughout our lives fight For what might never be and yet might. You will hit rock bottom Several more times in your life, And yet you will occasionally rise to top ’em Despite the never ending strife.’ ‘Thank you, kind Sprite,’ I replied. ‘Your virtue cannot be denied. I will plough my own furrow And make the evil dingos burrow, While suffering the vicissitudes of life, And occasionally I’ll even be Mack the Knife.’ ‘Good for you, Tosh,’ said the Sprite, with a smile, ‘And now I’ll sit on your shoulder for a while, And observe your relatives at play As they do come what may.’ So off towards Cadworthy Wood did we go, While Mummy spewed verbal diarrhoea in full flow. But when we drove ’cross Meavy Splash, The Sprite leapt onto the bonnet, And recited a sonnet and all sorts of trash. When Daddy burped his horn, She looked most forlorn, And inside the old oak at Meavy did she vanish To share a jug of rough Scrumpy, a turnip pie, mash, and hyacinth garnish, And a sevenfold South Hamsian hug. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, June 2013 |
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The Peter and Mary Tavy Time Pixie | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | ’Twas early dawn and the fields were packed with maize and corn, When I clambered from my badgers’ burrow Six feet under the blacksmith’s grave And followed a deeply cut furrow On the top of Conan’s poetic Moor, Like a capricious, though dyed-in-the-wool, knave, Frozen to the core, but forelocks to the fore. I live with my fellow pixies and Dixies, Agelessly beyond the ancient stanary town of Tavistock, Where ’Enery the Eighth put paid to the benevolent Abbey, ‘Cos he thought the rich monks were behaving shabbily, Where the Dukes of Bedford took the people in their beds And exploited them like a gang of inbred reds, And where Tawi’s crazy, shot-around-the-inside-of-the-head bell ringer In 1892 stood accused of the double murder Of two St. Peter’s innocents, in the Guildhall dock, Having given his guilty self an explosive dinger, Jumping off the Harford Bridge like a cowardly smidge, And imagining that he, William ‘Blücher’ Williams, was stone dead. When the injured crackpot in Exeter Gaol was hung, Some pined and others sung. I ventured, in mind no longer desperately poor, Feeling like an angel, no less no more, From the remarkably docile St. Peter’s Churchyard. Past the Peter Tavy Inn, longing for a gin and sin, To the bridle path that leads like a petite boulevard ’Cross the Tavy from Tawi to Tavi, Planning a random time warp, With zillions of fractured seconds to gawp, Around these suspended-in-time twin villages, Not yet free from feudal pillages, Long since renamed Peter and Mary Tavy, Where the ale is so good, ’Cos it’s brewed in the wood, And the beef pasties are laced with gravy. ‘Why hello, Beat Shank,’ Sang a rooster sounding like Country Hank, As I crossed the Tavy o’er the Clam. ‘Would you care for a chunk of my hard-boiled ham?’ ‘Yes please, Arch Buck Fedo, with a bite of Calstock cheese,’ I replied, ever ready to please. ‘I have to beat a hasty, Beat,’ said Fedo, Fondling his left teat. ‘But my cheese ain’t half tasty. I’ll see you later in the Elephants’ Nest When I have a chance to take my rest.’ ‘Hello Beat,’ said Gentle Annie, As she leapt out of St. Mary’s Churchyard And landed on her fanny. ‘Without wishing to sound untoward, I wonder if you could lend me a groat for my dear granny?’ ‘I only have a single farthing,’ I replied, ‘And I want to spend it on an aniseed ball. But here’s a clover for you, my darling. Don’t roll over, or your pride may fall.’ ‘Watch you step!’ cried flaky Sammy Knacky, Behaving typically whacky, ‘Or I’ll give you a fair smack, And some sincere Moretonhampstead flack.’ So off I fled up to the summit of the hill, Feeling that I’d had my whack and my fulsome fill. There Tibbet the Highwayman was hanging from the lofty gibbet, At some lost point in time, Reeking of cow dung and pigs’ swill, Fearing for his giblets, And heading for a slimy coffin laced with lime. Wally Weep wept tears beside him. What an insidious creep! Weep picked pockets ever so deep, And deserved to be put to sleep. I scorned the gypsies wintering on the Burrows, And drifted ’cross the Time Doctor’s effervescent meadows, To seek silver nuggets in the Prince Arthur (A deep mine Captain Kent renamed the Wheal Betsy After all the later public outcry and vent, While renting it from Lord Fauntleroy Kermondeley-Kretsky), Only for me to see the re-emergence of the Royal Duke of Clarence Ripper, From the old engine room, with feisty menace; Thereupon, His Munificence presented the captain with a gold pencil case While staring me full in the face. ‘God damn your eternal soul!’ I cried, Since the truth about that foxy Jack in the Box couldn’t be denied; His brain deserved to be toasted and fried.
I hotfooted it across the landscape, Heeled it passed the huge Buller water wheel, And began to feel finer and in line When I reached the mighty Wheal Friendship mine, Where the Bal Maidens broke up the Mundic with their hammers, And were paid a mere shilling a day despite their clammers; The largest copper and arsenic mine in the entire world, Where the workers grew old while the gents and ladies twirled And the gentry their patriotic flags unfurled. ‘Hello, Beat Shank,’ cried Billy Go Deeper, ‘Can you spare a dime for Weeze Buck? He’s down on his luck, and turning into an inveterate sleeper.’ ‘I’d give him his shilling if he was wide awake and willing,’ I replied, wheezing for a tease And feeling quite the sleaze, ‘But, Billy Go, why don’t we to and fro a’ fishing go, And bury our spare salmon in the snow?’ Just then the shrieking siren wailed and bawled, And Billy down the deep mineshaft was recalled, To toil like a stunted Cornish mole, While becoming increasingly outraged and dolefully droll, ’Til he to kind Ohio fled To dredge for silver and lead in a muddy riverbed While standing on his completely bald head. To cap that, the sapper Jan Scuse turned into a recluse, Without e’er a sick excuse, Before setting sail for West Africa On a dank Devonport slave trafficker, Digging gold in the great Broomassie, And wedding a fair Plymothian lassie With a homely brother who was all too sassy. ********************* I glanced at the dour Dowerlands Cottage, Where the still-being-corrected fallen women From all along the Tamar Valley and around West Devon Were tending their flowers and potage. I proceeded to luv’ly Laburnam House, Dodging every gnome and giant mouse, Where slick Uncle Herbie Minhinick was in fine nick Running his coal and forge business on the quick, With his usual kindness, common sense and sharpness. Just then pretty Emma Doidge emerged from the shed-like Villas. Munching a pork sandwich with all sorts of interesting fillers, Sweet seventeen with plenty of spleen, As energetic as I’d ever been, As attractive a choirgirl as I’ve ever seen. ‘I’m having fun with the noble Squire Rector’s son,’ she beamed, With an enchanting occultian gleam. ‘The dummkopf Blücher’s deadmeat and Philip knocks me off my feet. He treats me like a lamb fit to bleat’.’ ‘But that Bryant’s a duplicitous cad,’ I exclaimed, Though from swearing and cursing I refrained. ‘He has two little daughters not even by his Dad maintained, And this could end up menacingly bad. If Blücher sees you walking together, He may brew up a storm you cannot weather.’ ‘Dinnat worrit, meaty-sweet Beat!’ smirked Emma, cocking her feather. ‘Philip and I meet in my father’s barn, for a weekly fling and a yarn. But it’s Bill Rowe the organ blower who walks me home to my bower, A handsome youth not yet ready to flower, He always brings a brolly in case of a shower And from girls has been known to cower.’ When I left Emma, I felt deep forboding and my confidence eroding, And my magical neurotransmitters were in need of some recoding. I prayed to Merlin, to the Goddess Fortune and to Baal, In the hope that the Gods of Fertility and Nature would prevent What I could not circumvent, Hoping beyond hope that what was to be would not really be, And that I was barking up the wrong tree. Some fifteen years later I was aroused By the Four Horses of the Apocalypse Neighing in the clouds. When I crept from my badgers’ sett, Hoping to meet my long-yearned-for sweet Yvette, I saw the ghost of the regal Squire Rector, Doctor of Divinity from Wadham (A proud college where the Warden liked to coddle ’em), Recently nobly deceased as befits a learned St. Peter’s priest, Dressed in a decaying suit with trousers well-creased And weeping over the tomb of Emma Doidge (1875-1892). Alas! The poor lass! There were so many sad things to rue; ‘In the midst of life there is death,’ was on her stone engraved. After her funeral I’d always prayed that her soul would be saved, Even though she’d mixed with the damned and the depraved, And for the resurrection of her immortal soul I’ve for ever craved. ‘My days were like a shadow and I withered like grass Years before my long-hoped-for-death came to pass.’ Bemoaned the ghost of Francis Bryant, wiping his misty glasses And staring at the baying donkeys, goats and asses. ‘Young Emma and Bill were brutally shot after leaving my church, And it didn’t take us long for the foul double murderer to search. He, my bell ringer William Williams, was hung from a noose, Though too insane to tell his neck from his boots. However, my thus disowned eldest son was the worse villain, Though he didn’t do any actual killing. He was in truth and fact the blaggard who Williams intended to shoot When the misfit myopically mistook Bill Rowe for the crass coot. An old man also died at the scene of the crime, From a heart attack, rolling in the dust and grime, And the unfortunate farm lad Oxenham blew his own brains away Bearing the brunt of the witchhunt for the beast of all blaggards, Which could still continue for many a day Until the salacious swords are finally replaced in the scabbards. Meanwhile five of our families grieve and feud in utter dismay.’ ‘The survivors will call this the Tragedy of Peter Tavy,’ I predicted, in alarm. ‘The feuds will last and your accursed parish forever harmed. Such are the effects of the follies of youth When their lovemaking becomes unmannered And their behaviour so uncouth, And of the crassness of older men when they lose their ruth And never tell the Gospel truth.’ ‘What is hidden from silly men can’t be hidden from our wise Creator,’ Opined the evangelical rector, Flipping his lid like a childish spector. ‘And Almighty God doesn’t go light on the thunderbolts or the painful rod. If only my delightfully jolly eldest son had gone to fish haddock and cod. He’s since become a mere coal carrier, the totally miserable sod!’ ‘Philip Bryant will die in an earth-shattering blast in the 1941 Blitz Right out in the East London Styx,’ I forecast, ‘And his pieces will be buried under the roots of yon tree Ten yards behind your aristocratic Hoskyns-Abrahall wife and pompous thee, So that gentle people who visit Your Holiness his grave will never see. The grief of his impoverished Plymothian offspring I also foresee; His dying paramour Prothesa will pursue you shortly; She is the mother of your cruelly disregarded, disinherited dynasty. Since to her marriage to Philip you were too stuck up to ever agree, And George Oxenham you failed to protect from the wild and angry, A portion of the future blame will be assigned to Almighty thee. So much for an over-the-top Christian busy bee! ’ Now, a century or more later, Tawi is as quiet as a well-drugged fornicator, Apart from the Peter Tavy Inn, where they still play and sin, And the Harford Bridge Holiday Park, where the children fight And the parents give in. And, when all’s done and said, Tavi is relatively dead, With just six hundred sultry souls, Though the ghosts still play cricket and bowls, Its dynamic past lost through the many sins of its transgressors Who never bothered to even seek their confessors. But it’s still good to go for a drink, In the Elephants’ Nest or the upmarket inn on the crest Where the zestful locals are very occasionally at their best. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, June 2013 | |
| Composer’s Notes: Some of my detailed information, including local terminology and people’s names, refers to the article ‘Mary Warne on Mary Tavy & Peter Tavy’ by Mary Warne which is published on the Mary Tavy Parish Council website. See my fictional short story ‘The Tragedy of Peter Taverton’ for further background. The Reverend Dr. Francis Bryant of St. Peter’s Church, Peter Tavy, was my great great grandfather, and his errant son Philip Hoskyns Bryant was my father’s maternal grandfather (See my Family Ancestry, which is published on my website, for matching photographs and my father Cecil Leonard’s 1979 account). Please read Chapter Nine of ‘Tavistock’s Yesterdays’ by Gerry Woodcock for a detailed description of the 1892 murders outside St. Peter’s Church and their nationally reported aftermath. This poem is now published on the Mary Tavy Parish website. |
| The Thaw and the Revival | | by Nicola Romanski and Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Another winter fades into memory As the ice thaws during our half-centenary; Rushing swollen streams extend their banks While we to our Blessed Mother of Nature give thanks. They burst forth from a frozen limbo Like a surge of blood into a sleeping limb. As we dally with Jumbo and Jimbo, Tom loves Nicola again and she loves him; Life shakes away the cold and remembers, As death takes away and dismembers, And in the mad rush the glorious thaw awakes the sleeping, While our playful childhood dreams are ever deepening. In the Wyalusing woods, the smell of death and decay Gives space for other things to grow and flourish And the animals the food to nourish As the shady spirits go on their way To return again on a tranquil day. We explore our old haunts Frail and fraught amidst the games and flaunts, And with the feeling are struck, That, amidst all the gooey muck, The thoughts in this place, From souls of every norm and race, Have taken on some curious form Like a spaceship in a sorority dorm Or a Riemannian manifold without a norm; Some remotely detectable shape,
Summertime in Edinburgh | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | When it’s Springtime on Icarus ’Tis Summertime in Edinburgh, And the space cadets, smart Swedes and Jerry boys come out to play As Arthur C. Clarke to Charlotte Square wends his way; The French in a human circus on the Meadows do entwine, And the gruff Lady Boys self-impersonate quite fine, While we in The World’s End down heavenly shots From tiny plastic pots, And fine Italian wine From crystal glasses too divine.
Filled with glee, and feeling unusually twee, I off to High and Mighty go, To buy seven multi-coloured shirts in a row, All twenty-one inch neck; What the heck! On Castle Street, I flourish in a traders’ market so fancifully replete And buy a tight necklace and a curly bracelet For Tomasz at ten quid each, And for myself a locket, An apple and a peach. At another stall I try to solve a family mystery By tracing my Hoskyns history; That’s wot all kin of an Os in Anglo-Saxon times were called, While by the Vikings they were being raped and mauled; A giggling girl sells me a rolled-up scroll Bearing three resplendent lions on my forbears’ Coat-of-Arms, And an ancient recipe full of witches’ charms But it’s headed ‘Finem respice’. Consider the end? That’s enough to send me round the bend! Come yet one more Festival time, I feel particularly in my prime, As along the Royal Mile I roam While the clowns bounce in the foam, The jugglers keep everyone enthralled, And the dancers and the magicians are repeatedly recalled. Oh, happy, happy day; The whole world is coming my way. At ten each night, I disappear from sight, An hour-long ‘Hot Chocolate’ concert to behold, With every ticket scrupulously sold; It’s in Old St. Paul’s, Famous for its bells and smells And homilies from o’er God’s dells, Where now the pews serve as stalls, And the singers and musicians have the balls To return for multitudinous imaginary recalls; Snazzy Sheila serves the mushy drinks And solemn Nigel kicks out the dinks, But everybody blinked and winked The evening they brought on Seamus and the Kinks. ‘I could have danced all night’ sang Janet De Vigne, When everybody burst their spleen; To a more jocular show I’ve never been. Come Autumn I go into free fall As dourness and standoffishness replace Venus’s ball; The grand city has a small town atmosphere once again, While poets compose and writers take up the pen. This winter to the Planet Icarus I will in a spaceship float; To travel the twisting Vulcanian fiords in a Martian love boat. Auld Reekie is such a sar sicht to see Without the summertime tourists, happiness and glee I’d prefer to go all along, down along, out along lee, To Pennsylvania, or Portree, Since from the quasi-posh crap I’ll always flee. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, July 2013 |
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Remaindered here without us, That makes the satanic Archangels gape, And their choirs sing the Benedictus Sanctus. We wander, in our minds and memories, Respecting our sleek contemporaries, Through these extraordinary places, Imagining we’re out at the hurdle races, And the ghosts we encounter Are as weird as a Jabberwocky monster Embracing a Chicago mobster.
Time consumes our thoughts As we grow carbuncles and warts. Grass grows through the concrete we laid down And bats and moths shred your multi-coloured gown. The eternal process knows nothing of attachments, But our identity holds onto these fragments, To compile our personal histories And remember our mysteries And fleeting sense of self, With due deference to the green Merlin elf. From day to day, we struggle on our way And with the utmost ferocity To reclaim our childhood curiosity. But so easily can these thoughts be misplaced And ’til Purgatory disgraced, By indifference, fear and fright, As we struggle through the slumberless night, However, we’ll never ever give up the paraspiritual fight Until we see the purple and green Heavenly light And address the dispassionate Mind Creator in all his might. No redress! Forsooth! Our Valhalla is in sight. | | © Nicola Romanski and Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, June 2013 | |
| Five Acrostic Poems In Ottava Rima | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | THE QUINTESSENTIAL QUINCUNX | | Quintessential tile in Cosmatesque stonework Used as pattern for planning a rose orchard In architecture cross-in-square for domed kirk No help for Brits facing Romans at York’s ford Called saltire in flag of bygone Quatanurk Used in ‘Grace’ to seat five men for Jesu’s word Neat arrangement for Saturn rocket engines Xenophobic symbol for crass religions (And smelly pooping grounds for silly pigeons) | | JERRY MANDER | | Jerry Mander liked getting schmuck and blander Each ev’ning he didn’t give a fuck ‘bout Rosie; Rip van Winkle would’ve woken at his slander. 'E were stricken when Neil gave Rose a posy, Mighty dumb stricken though goose for the gander, Indeed Jerry hit the bottle, went dosey, And slagged ev’ry Tom, Dick and Harry in Drem, Having spurned naff Tarquin and the crème de la crème | | THE BOY WITH THE GARGANTUAN NOSE | | Joe poked his snout into the white donkey’s trough Over the top of the green orang-utan, Ere he sneezed and wheezed after he’d had enough. So he scampered home to complain to his Gran. ‘Nosey Parker!’ yelled his Sis, there in the buff. Oh, dearie me,’ he exclaimed, ‘Now where’s my All Bran?’ ‘Sod off!’ yelled his fat Mummy, twisting his beak, Ere he ran to Kate’s and turned into a freak. | | A WHALE OF A BOAT TRIP | | Noah and Noah bounded in two by two, Off-green wallaby and bright red kangaroo, Awash with slick hairspray and plenty of poo. Hansel and Gretel joined throng with ne’er a shoe; Susan wore a thong, came with a funny crew, And the shark wore white, the whale his water blew; Rory burped, and off into the floods they went; Kath so enjoyed her view of the River Gwent. | | ON THE ROAD TO BANGALORE | | Levi met Peter on road to Bangalore, Even before red cockerel had thrice crowed, ‘Verily I say,’ he said, ‘You’ll hit the floor, ‘If you should ever manage to fit to mould’ ‘To Hell with you,’ said Pete. ’I’ll with eagles soar ‘In excelsios Deo, and I’ll be bold ‘Cos you’re a ghastly excruciating bore.’ Up into the mountains the grumbling pair went. Suffice to say, they weren’t soon to Heaven sent. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, November 2013 |
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My A B C of Faces | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Amelia has neat eyelashes and a pert snout, Brett a gracious smile and a surly pout, Colin a crooked jaw and a pirate’s ring, Dink a face like a kitchen sink which does ming. Eartha with her red feline beak does entrance; Felix’s fleas across his speckled cheeks do dance Giles’s piles from his elongated nose intrude; Hera’s divine dimples create an interlude; Irving’s regal wrinkles are bedecked with warts; James’s skin crinkles and the scorched sunburn thwarts; Keira cares for her sweet complexion fair; Leonard’s mug is a Neanderthal’s nightmare; Moira coats her visage with thick muddy sludge; Nan’s facelift is an unadulterated fudge; Orlando is as handsome as a dark knight; Pedro’s twisted konk gives me a ghastly fright; Quentin’s freckles freak bright ginger in the night; Rodney’s teeth and spectacles are out of sight; Sally looks like a Cyclops in dire disguise; Thomas wears a rough diamond tween his eyes; Ulric’s bones protrude from his jaw like Yoric’s; Vivienne’s sexy grin gives rise to frolics; Willy’s camp make-up conceals his snotty sneer; Xia’s green powder makes her look really queer; Yvonne simply can’t help appearing bovine; Zebedee’s look is overwhelmingly equine (But I am the prettiest princess of all, And I above you cretins will ever walk tall). | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, December 2013 |
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The Moral High Ground | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | We, God’s honest ones, hold the moral high ground, While millions suffer and die in the world around, Some kowtow, others offend, We, by our integrity, will the world defend. Let them come to us, not us beg to them, As the bureaucrats, shrinks, and procrastinators spew their flem. All good Scots will eventually see what’s what. And the bad ones? Stew them in the pot. |
| © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, December 2013
Wherefor Dennis? | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Husband of sweet Joan, Father of dynasties, Pioneer at Cambridge Of theory of queues; Defender of the Savageous Bayesian faith Creator of De Finetti’s everlasting fame, Creator of Lindley’s enigmatic paradox, Grand Inquisitor of Fisher’s Fiducial Inference, His Bayes-Stein estimator reigns supreme Scourge of iconic Florence When he to the Chair at UCL majestically rose, Then scourge of neurotic me. Oh happy, happy, we gay people should be. My grand educator, Leaving my family destitute and forlorn. Wherefor Dennis, oh noble Charon, When he the Ferryman his penny pays, And wherefor me? | | In Memoriam, Dennis V. Lindley (1923-2013) | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, December 2013 |
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TO MY AUNT GLORIA | | An Adaption of a Traditional Irish Blessing | | May the road rise up to meet you May the wind be always at your back May the sun shine warm upon your face The rains fall soft upon your fields And until we meet again, may God Hold you in the palm of his hand And raise you from the coasts you love To the orchards in the Heavens. |
| | The first six lines of this blessing are identical to an old Irish verse. The last two lines were composed by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard.
Ode to Uncle John | | by Thomas Hoskyns Leonard | | Why does the Apostle He loved so much Live in our midst in Dumnonia’s thrall? Is it because he’ll be revered as such Or is he here to spread love through us all? | | My uncle and godfather was brought up Listening to his grandpa heave and snore Mourning his Dad lost on Zealand’s shores And helping his Mum with the rent and chores | | He adored Chris like Jonathan loved his prince, His family like Jesu loved his flock, Art, music, and all that poppycock, And travelling along with British Rail. | | John will be here when He returns again, And my uncle will with Lord Jesus reign. | | © Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, February 2013 |
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