A common man marvels at uncommon things. A wise man marvels at the commonplace. CONFUCIUS

Thursday, 27 December 2012

It's Here


The Passionate Transitory's second issue is now available online. Click here to read some of the best and most exciting contemporary world poetry. Contributions have come from the UK, the USA, Spain, Eastern Europe and India. 21 poets are represented this time around (as opposed to 14 in the first issue). They include 10 outstanding writers you'll remember from Issue 1, and 11 new contributors, including  Fiona Pitt-Kethley and Hélène Cardona. We hope you enjoy.

I'm proud once again that the contributions are of such a high standard in this new edition of the magazine. The poems are immensely varied, and you'll warm to some at once, though others may take more time. But savour them, read them again and again, and, like me, I think you'll come to appreciate them all, with their different styles, syntaxes, punctuations, themes and concerns — whether they are the intense, inventive poetics of Jenne' R Andrews or the mythical dreamscapes of Hélène Cardona, the urban park realism of Stephen Regan or the wry humour of Les Merton, the playful originality of Seth Crook or the conjoined inner and outer worlds of Morelle Smith. I can't single out everyone here; just read and enjoy. And I leave you with two of my favourite lines from the whole collection: 'These things we see by chance, / Like city lights celestial in the rain, / Or something overheard about Idaho...' (Geoffrey Heptonstall).

From The Editorial of The Passionate Transitory's latest issue.

Sunday, 23 December 2012

Nearly Ready



Submissions are now closed for Issue 2 (Winter 2012) of The Passionate Transitory poetry magazine.

Issue 1 (Autumn 2012) contained 35 poems by 14 poets. Issue 2 (Winter 2012) will contain 47 poems by 21 poets — including 10 former contributors and 11 new contributors. A nice mix.

The standard is once again high (for every poem accepted I'm rejecting dozens), and there are some poems which are sensational, but it wouldn't be right for an editor to pass his or her own opinion on such qualitative matters, so I'll leave it to you poetry readers out there to judge! It's fascinating, though, that in poetry, above all, everyone seems to like different things. Luckily I have quite a wide taste and appreciation, which is probably a good asset for a poetry editor.

Issue 2 will be available online at some point over the Christmas/New Year period. Watch this space.

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Alternative Christmas

I thought I'd give this Christmas poem of mine a re-run...  

Supposing Christmas never came

Supposing Christmas never came —
Santa on strike, the reindeer sick,
the presents barely wrapped,
the wise men lost, their camels lame,
shepherds without their flocks
(due to an outbreak of ovine flu),
the Virgin Mary, virginal no longer,
painting the town red,
Joseph distraught, the Holy Child
sans swaddling clothes, sans stable,
mangerless, and the bright star
of Bethlehem now a black hole,
turkeys extinct and Christmas trees
dead as Dutch elms — then I’d ascend
some nearby mountain such as Scafell Pike
or one afar like Ober Gabelhorn,
Aiguille d'Argentière or Monte Rosa,
and meditate within a little hut
like Thoreau at the edge of Walden Pond
or Kerouac on Desolation Peak.
I’d view the frosted ridges, snowy crests
(real mountain chains not paper chains,
real snow not the stuff out of a can),
thinking of nothing very much but Zen,
and letting pure agape flood right in.

Monday, 17 December 2012

The Passionate Transitory: Winter Issue


I'm now putting together the Winter Issue of The Passionate Transitory and already have 32 poems from 17 poets (9 of them new contributors). It's looking good. I'm still accepting last-minute contributions, so please send them in! I'll try to release the magazine before Christmas, but realistically it's more likely to be sometime between Christmas and the New Year.

Sunday, 16 December 2012

South West Coast Path. Day 19: Corfe Castle To South Haven Point

I'd heard that the chain ferry from South Haven Point at the end of the trail to Sandbanks on the other side of Poole Harbour was having its biennial refit. This was a shame, as I'd intended taking the ferry, sleeping overnight in Poole, then catching the train at Poole's main line station to London and thence to home. I didn't want to arrive at a non-existent ferry at the end of the day miles from anywhere and with nowhere to go. So I had to form quickly an alternative plan. From Corfe I would walk a cross-country route to South Haven Point, arrive around midday, trace the Coast Path 'backwards' as far as Swanage, stop there the night, and next morning catch a bus to Wareham, which also has a railway station on the main London line. And this is exactly what I did.   

A steel sculpture marks the end of the Coast Path at South Haven Point. The design is a pair of sails mounted on a compass, and the silhouettes depict scenes from the trail. My backpack and walking poles are resting against the sculpture.

The ferry slipway at South Haven Point. No ferry, of course. Sandbanks, on the opposite bank, is, unbelievably, one of the most expensive places in the world to buy property.

Still no ferry. One could wait a long time.

I set out for Swanage along the lonely shoreline of Shell Bay.

As you can see, hundreds of naturists thronged the strand at Studland Bay. There were bits of bodies dangling and bouncing all over the place. I didn't know where to look.

Thank goodness I soon reached the covered-up part of the beach. Here women in skimpy bikinis frolicked in the surf, men waddled to the sea's edge — their bellies protruding hairily over tight bathing trunks — and children built castles in the sand. Only joking. Apart from one well-wrapped couple and their dog I was the only person there. 

I passed the Old Harry pinnacles and stacks on The Foreland.

And no, I wasn't daring enough to brave this narrow, airy ridge. I rounded the corner and Swanage came into view (much nicer than Weymouth). The next day I boarded the Wareham bus and began my journey home. I had now walked the whole 620 miles of the South West Coast Path — the first 400 miles more than 2 years ago, and the last 220 miles over the past 19 days.

South West Coast Path. Day 18: Lulworth Cove To Corfe Castle

Another day of fine weather and splendid scenery. And another strenuous one — by 10.30 am I'd already climbed three steep cliffs. 

The path passed through the Lulworth Military Range, an active firing range for tanks and other armoured vehicles, owned by the Ministry of Defence. By a sheer piece of luck it was a Sunday, and the Range Walks are open to the public most weekends (but not most weekdays). Had the gates been shut and the red flags flying, I'd have had to make a considerable detour inland. Note the triangular sign on the fence: 'DANGER UNEXPLODED SHELLS KEEP OUT'. 

And just in case there was any doubt...

You must stick to the path at all times, though I very foolishly strayed off it slightly to take this photo of a destroyed tank (is that a rocket launcher at the front?)

Part of the tank firing range is on the right of the picture, and if you enlarge it you can just make out other destroyed tanks dotted here and there. 

Worbarrow Bay,


For a long time I'd wanted to visit the village of Tyneham which lies at the heart of this military area. It had been commandeered by the Army in the 1940s and its residents evacuated. Now it's a ghost village frozen in time. Here's the old telephone box...

... and here's the drinking fountain. Above the tap is a quote from the Gospel of John: 'Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again: but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst...' It really amused me that a modern sign had been attached to the stonework warning: 'Do not drink'! On the left of the fountain you can see the shadow of the Solitary Walker.

St Mary's Church, Tyneham.

In total 252 people were displaced from the village, and the last person to leave pinned this notice on the church door: 'Please treat the church and houses with care; we have given up our homes where many of us lived for generations to help win the war to keep men free. We shall return one day and thank you for treating the village kindly.' They were never allowed back, and Tyneham remains in the hands of the military to this day.

I'd deviated from the coast to see Tyneham and was way behind schedule. I rejoined the path... 

... but realised I'd have to quit the path again as soon as I could to reach my accommodation in Corfe Castle before nightfall. Corfe lay a few miles inland, so at Kimmeridge Bay I headed up a quiet road towards Kimmeridge village.   

Thatched cottages in Kimmeridge. I followed a network of minor roads and country lanes, and by mid-afternoon had arrived in Church Knowle, where I had a pint at the New Inn. It was very busy with late Sunday diners. All in all, a very friendly and appealing pub.

 Corfe Castle was in sight, attractively situated in a gap in the Purbeck Hills. Actually I'd already spotted the castle from five miles away, and it had guided me like a beacon. Corfe is attractive, but spoilt by the main road which runs through it. The very moment I found my B&B — the welcoming Alford House in East Street — the rain started to patter down. I'd been free of rain for a while, so I suppose I couldn't complain.  

Saturday, 15 December 2012

South West Coast Path. Day 17: Weymouth To Lulworth Cove

Looking back at Weymouth across Weymouth Bay. I did not especially like Weymouth when I arrived (it seemed too big and busy and tatty round the edges), but it took on a warmer glow later that evening from the plush interior of a sea front Chinese restaurant. Perhaps it was something to do with the comforting sizzling beef, the noodles and the wine?   

What a glorious day it was —  one of the best days weather-wise of the whole journey. The sea was blue, the sky was blue and the sun hardly stopped shining. It was cold, but, hey, this was December 1st!  

Apart from the beautiful Somerset coast, and Cornwall's remote Lizard peninsula, this was some of the best scenery on the whole coastal path. The Dorset-shire downlands swept in waves before me like an endless, natural switchback. And just look at those white cliffs! 

'Two roads diverged in a yellow wood and sorry I could not travel both...' Or, in this case, two roads diverged in a yellow field. Resisting a compulsive itch to head for the intriguingly-named Scratchy Bottom, I turned right for Lulworth Cove. I wonder what I missed? Ants in my pants?

Wonderful cliffscape. See that steep path I've just come down? Well, I'm now half-way up the other side. Up and down, up and down — the theme of the trip. 

I surveyed the next staggering vista and groaned at the prospect of yet another punishing slope. Note the single sea stack on the bottom-right.

A better view of that chalk pinnacle.

This is the rock arch of Durdle Door, one of the most well-known geological features in England...

... and this is the lovely St Oswald's Bay...

... and this is the equally stunning, scallop-shaped Lulworth Cove in the late afternoon sun. I sensed another fine day was in store.

South West Coast Path. Day 16: Abbotsbury To Weymouth

Leaving Abbotsbury, I spotted the isolated chapel of St Catherine on a hilltop. Abbotsbury is famous for its Swannery, established by Benedictine monks in the 1040s, who farmed the swans for food. Now it's a tourist destination, and the swans are pampered and protected. Therefore swanburgers are most definitely off the menu in the Swannery café, and you have to make do with Cornish pasties and Devonshire cream teas.  

For much of the day the path ran alongside the Fleet lagoon. Even though it was generally flat walking, I found the going tedious and difficult. The rain all summer plus the recent downpours had turned many sections of the path into quagmires, and I seemed to spend many exhausting hours slip sliding in the mud.

I love this photo of the Fleet lagoon, as it's so typical of the day's experience: a lake of gunmetal grey, an overcast sky, an occasional, fleeting shaft of sunlight and a vast emptiness. 

The lagoon was a haven for birds — apart from thousands of swans, I saw gulls, cormorants, oystercatchers and many flocks of noisy brent geese. These are migratory birds, flying here for the winter from Canada, Greenland and Scandinavia.

Abandoned boat on a lonely shore.

At one field gate I had to clamber awkwardly over a barbed wire fence and ford a swollen stream via a fallen tree in order to avoid sinking up to my knees in a mire churned up by droves of cattle. Eventually, tiring of this, I took a shortcut to Weymouth by sneaking up through a caravan site, then following suburban roads into town. Not as pretty a route, to be sure — but at least I didn't have to think continually about where to put my feet, and my boots could dry off a bit.

Friday, 14 December 2012

Red Pepper And Sweet Potato Soup

I'm fanatical about soups, and today I made a red pepper and sweet potato soup — the perfect winter warmer.

Recipe (3/5 bowls)

Roast in the oven at 200 degrees C. 500gm thinly sliced sweet potatoes, two roughly chopped red onions, a roughly chopped red pepper and two teaspoons of ground cumin. (Coat everything with a good measure of olive oil first.)

After about 40 minutes, when the vegetables are nicely charred at the edges, remove from the oven and liquidise in a large saucepan, after adding between one half-litre and one litre (depending on how thick or thin you like the soup) of hot vegetable stock.

Season to taste.

This is also good with chorizo.

South West Coast Path. Day 15: Chideock To Abbotsbury

The day dawned bright and cold with a slight frost. After an excellent breakfast at Rose Cottage in Chideock, I strode down to the shoreline. Here I'm on Seatown beach looking back at yesterday's route over Golden Cap.   

The tiny settlement of Seatown was almost deserted.

Although the wind had dropped, there was still a biting, northerly breeze on the cliff tops. I tackled several steep ups and downs...

... before descending to Eype's Mouth, where I noticed the obligatory caravan park. In fact it was hard to miss.

The next place was the undistinguished West Bay, which used to be Bridport's harbour (Bridport is a Dorset market town situated just inland on the river Brit). I suddenly realised I'd been in Dorset since Lyme Regis without knowing it.

I'd already passed three caravan parks, and now came to the daily golf course. The only thing missing was a military firing range. The green path zigzagged up a final cliff edge... 

... then levelled out on the approach to Chesil Bank. There are my backpack and walking poles resting against the National Trust sign.

Chesil Bank is a shingle beach 18 miles long, 700 ft wide and 50 ft high. It divides a conservation area of reed beds and brackish lagoons on the one side from the sea on the other. On the skyline you can see the Isle of Portland — not actually a true island as it's joined to the mainland by a stony spit carrying a road. Some of you may recall that this is the setting for Ian McEwan's novel, On Chesil Beach.

Evidence of the recent storms and flooding. The path alongside the shingle bank was very muddy, and sometimes completely submerged, so I was forced to walk on the pebbles instead, which was extremely hard work. 

The walkways through the nature reserve... 

... had disappeared under a foot or more of rainwater...