In My Own Words

The Poems of David Garlick

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India

 

India, my India, how I remember you.

Not as some soldier or wide eyed tourist

awed by your ancient culture –

and your milling multitudes.

Nor fascinated by the riches of a maharaja,

horrified by mutilated beggars in the streets

or shocked by the teaming destitute

that throng the Kashmir Gate.

No I remember you as a child, a schoolboy

accepting all as part of life,

a glimpse of what made India a wondrous place.

A place I love so deeply in my heart.

 

This patchwork quilt of colorful people,

gentle hill folk, fierce warriors,

quiet villages, bustling cities, deserts,

plains, jungles and rolling hills.

Stretching from the great southern ocean

to the ramparts of the majestic Himalayas

that thrust their way upwards,

till cloaked in snow and crowned with clouds,

they touch the northern sky.

 

I sit and dream about those days spent with you.

They seem so real.

Surely I can touch a Banyan tree

or taste the spicy sweetmeats

from the vendor in the street.

Women, picking tea, chatter on the hillside,

while others carry water home,

in red earthenware chatties,

balanced on proud heads.

 

In my minds eye,

buffalo still drag the plough through fields.

Kites wheel overhead, ever watchful for carrion.

And I can walk in peace,

the warm sun at my back

or pluck a pear that overhangs the road.

Tears sting my eyes to think of friends

I left so long ago, before the folly of Partition.

Where are they now?

Those who taught me to understand their ways

and how to play “Goolly Dunda” on the maidan.

 

Though my tongue no longer

spills the lilting language locked within

my blurring memories.

Still my heart aches to scenes

that float behind my eyes.

Bright glimpses of another world,

fleeting flotsam on the river of time.

 

David Garlick, Victoria, December, 1992

 

Posted in Deep, Fun, Life, Love, Nature, Poems of Love

Legacy

 

When we are gone, what would we leave behind?

Few rate a statue cast in bronze

or build a monument to shout their name.

So what do we, the ordinary folk

who toil each day to make the two ends meet,

expect that those we leave behind

will think of us in fleeting memory?

Make sure it isn’t just material things

that fly away like dust upon the wind.

Leave what can only be your own,

the smiles and laughter shared with those we love.

 

 

David Garlick, Victoria, 1987

 

 

Posted in Deep, Life, Love, Memorial, Philosophy, Poems Memorial

Ed

 

As Boilermakers go he went

as far as he could go.

With booze and broads and gambling

his money he would blow.

He worked on any job he could

to keep him in the black

and when he was away from home

he’d find a place to shack.

 

So any skirt he happened on

was a challenge and a thrill

and any girl, however gross

was bound to fill the bill.

A squat and squalid squaw he saw,

sauntering by a slough

and winding down a cracked window

called “darling want to screw?”

 

Her black eyes flashed, she did not dash

to pander to his whim

but took her time to rest an arm

on the cars window sill.

She smiled at him, a toothless grin,

her skirts she gave a hitch

and speaking low with breath aglow, said

“You’s a smooth talking sumva bitch!”

 

 

David Garlick, England, May, 1986

(As told by Ed the Boilermaker.)

 

Posted in Hot, Life, Life and Laughter

Mr. Penhaligan

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

Would you like to come to tea,

at my cottage by the sea?

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

I never eat bread and butter for tea.

Only scones and cake, you’ll see.

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

We could have a strawberry tea,

all sitting under my favorite tree.

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

Look what Amy’s made for tea.

Scones and crumpets and cake Dundee.

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

Look at the jellied raspberries.

Look at all the chocolate cookies.

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

It’s all set out under my tree.

Looking over the bright blue sea.

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

Shall I pour, or will your mummy

into those cups one, two, three?

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

Mr. Penhaligan said to me

I’m as full as full can be.

Can you eat another cookie?

Mr. Penhaligan said to me.

 

No thank you sir, not for me.

There’s no more room in my tummy.

But many thanks for a wonderful tea.

You’re welcome boy, he said to me.

 

 

David Garlick, Victoria, 1988

 

Posted in Fun, Giving, Kids, Light, Poems for Children
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