Alone

For the two of them,
this was home.
They made a family here,
nerchered them and sent them out into the world. 
She with her long black hair,
slim,
fit,
full of life.
He,
a handsome man,
with boyish looks and bright blue eyes. 
...eyes that twinkled,
well they twinkled when he saw her!

Sat in front of the cold,
dead,
fireplace,
the spot where they ate,
shared,
laught and loved,
...she sits,
grey and alone.

There were horses.
A paddock in which they rode,
stables in which they were cared for,
long gone.

And the large garden,
once full of summer colour,
now lost to the weeds,
overgrown and beyond her abilities.

Staring through the once polished windows,
she is alone.
Alone with the crumbling memories,
in a crumbling house,
once there's. 

Immobile,
but for a walking frame,
Isolated,
but for the local shop,
she is alone.

Alone,
...alone,
...alone.

Perfect Little World

"Now we mustn't let this nasty little virus get in the way of our perfect little world".
Our perfect little,
Leather seated,
4 by 4,
Sunday papers,
Two bottles of red,
Big bar of choccy,
Logs for the fire,
Blueberry and natural yoghurt,
little world.
...must we!?

(Haiku)

Coronavirus.
Seems the coffee queue's the place 
for the expertise 

(Haiku)

The air is clearing. 
Waterways once stagnant have
fish. Mankind, listen!

Haiku A Quartet

Don't touch me. I will
not touch you. I do not know
what powers it has.

I will not touch the
things which surround me. Are they
going to harm me?

Will it take those whom
I love from me? Will it brake 
my spirit, my heart?

Will I recognise 
the world which remains? Will I be there to see it?

A 'Jumper'

It was a woman.
She had the main road closed in both directions for most of the morning.
The little lanes and villages around the whole area were jammed solid.
There were lorries meeting lorries,
unable to pass down tiny country lanes,
people weren't getting anywhere this morning.

You should have heard them in the petrol station.
"There's a 'jumper' on the bypass on one of the over bridges! It's taken me ages to get to here, 
and I've still got into the city yet and I have a very important meeting to attend! How inconsiderate!"

How inconsiderate that a woman had reached the end of her teather.
How inconsiderate that she decided she would take herself away from it all,
whatever 'it all' was,
and jump from a bridge into on-coming traffic.
How inconsiderate that she thought that to die was the better option than the 'hell' she was going through.

The 'jumper' was a person, 
had a name, 
a family, 
a circle of friends,
it's just she had a life with which she was unable to cope. 
This 'jumper' had had enough, 
saw no way out,  
so decided to end it all. 

This 'jumper' was a woman, 
and luckily,
this woman was talked down.