Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dogs. Show all posts

Thursday, April 20, 2017

TULIPS AND PANSIES



TULIPS AND PANSIES

Queens Park in Loughborough is an ideal place to walk when you're recovering from a heart attack. It's flat and each time you do a circuit you find new things in the old to look at and wonder, to instigate new stories, true and made up.

A man being taken for a stroll by his three Jack Russell dogs nods a greeting and is pulled on by. We pass again by the aviary and nod again.

A group of Italian adults are playing in the children's activity area. They missed the sign that insists that adults unaccompanied by children are not allowed in the playground.

teenagers share
a spliff in the park bandstand
tulips and pansies

Paul Conneally

April 2017

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Dylan Thomas: portrait of the artist as a young dog



Dylan Thomas: portrait of the artist as a young dog
New Directions Paperbook Cover

Click here to read the tanka series After Fern Hill:
https://burnthewater.wordpress.com/2013/09/29/after-fern-hill/

Paul Conneally
October 2015

Friday, July 17, 2015

Saturday, July 11, 2015

This Pressing Heat


this pressing heat
a man with a sleeping dog
waves his taxi on

Paul Conneally
Leicester
July 2015




Saturday, February 21, 2015

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

One Upright Arm


20131030-201517.jpg

We move together along the disused railway track towards the top of the Swannington Incline.

"Don’t look the dog in the eyes. He don’t like it”

one upright arm
sustains the cheek
come walk with me
when things go wrong
there’s always the hedgerow

Paul Conneally 2011

From ‘Health Walk’ Paul Conneally with Nita Pearson ‘Whitwick to Swannington and Back’ May 2011

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Notes The line: 'one upright arm sustains the cheek’ is a fragment from “HOW RICH THAT FOREHEAD’S CALM EXPANSE” by William Wordsworth. Wordsworth tells us that the poem HOW RICH THAT FOREHEAD’S CALM EXPANSE was inspired by a print at Coleorton Hall, North West Leicestershire. Mrs Wordsworth’s impression was that HOW RICH THAT FOREHEAD’S CALM EXPANSE was also written at Coleorton Hall despite William’s note that it was written at Rydal Mount in the Lake District.

Saturday, July 09, 2011

One Upright Arm


We move together along the disused railway track towards the top of the Swannington Incline.

"Don't look the dog in the eyes. He don't like it"

one upright arm
sustains the cheek
come walk with me

when things go wrong
there's always the hedgerow


Paul Conneally 
2011
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