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Tag: nature

A River of Flight

I step outside, mind clenched,
wind rustles honeysuckle
delicate bowls of cream.

I wait for you, urgent wings
focused on feeding,
humming, humming, humming.

Bumble bees bounce between blooms
cabbage whites flit on the fray,

My arms chilled by breeze
thoughts dissipate in a river of flight.

Anna Chorlton 2025

Last Sight



A slip of butterflies
glides subtle wraiths
along settling herbs,
taste tangy marjoram
dank heads of buddleia
an apple young as winter’s indifference.

©Anna Chorlton

Reflection

While I was walking between cabins with my bucket of cleaning products, there were many birds beside the water I could have stayed there for hours.


Stepping out of a cabin
with my cloths and mops,
trees open to embrace
an olive-green mill lake.

On a plinth stands a bird
so still I ask if it’s real,
white beak closed in hiatus.

Reflection merges
a swirl in the water
cormorant dry as shadow.

I step out of a cabin,
on the plinth, dusky wings tucked,
a heron sleek as a rose,
goslings forage on the opposite shore.

Lakeside

Sighs linger along lakeside reed roots,
an eery gold rises    
hangs,    still as future's mudflats.
Ice stars underfoot
bones of winter
trees fragile waifs 
shield water blue as eggshells
beyond, the moor rising.

Thrift

I love the magic of arriving at the beach to the joy of coastal flowers. My favorites are thrift or sea pinks.

Petals of sunlit
sea pinks sway
to the timbre
of longing.
Waves crash
in a surge of wanting
and the black sand remembers.

Cornish Moorland

Spring is celebrating all around us and if you listen carefully you can hear the cuckoo call as I did while out walking on Bodmin Moor, Cornwall.

Today

Today’s the day
the cuckoo calls across the hills.
Today’s the day
the jackdaw drops her wool in surprise.
Today’s the day
the adder sings a tapping song.
Today’s the day
the frogs sulk in the reeds.
Today’s the day
the lamb defies its ewe.
Today’s the day
I walk the moor with you.


Anna Chorlton
The Liskeard and Looe Railway

Spring in Cornish Woodland

Field of Trees

I’m away to the wood
she shows off her green;
Horse Chestnut offers fingers gloved in lime,
Beech and Ash flutter a thousand butterflies,
Oak reveals just a glimpse of her gown,
Hawthorn clasps blossom, tight buds of May,
Bluebell opens her arc petal by petal,
her song arising a haze of eyes.
Hawthorn buds soon to open in an arc of May

Silver Y

 Silver Y

Arriving a slow, fluttering
bloom of heavy wings,
Silver Y settles
beneath nettle edges,
bramble jewels.
 
Her cloak a layered bark;
striking hooks of silver,
inner flutes in navy,
petticoat edged with lemon,
 
 glides -
 
- alights
 
crouches on birch,
spider legs splayed,
silent as summer.
 
 
© Anna Chorlton 2020