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  • BETWEEN RIVERS SUMMER 2023: ANNE DOUGLAS, POET & ARTIST – ALAN HORNE

    BETWEEN RIVERS is a quarterly series edited by Alan Horne. It is focused on the area bounded by the rivers Alyn, Dee and Gowy, on the border between England and Wales in Flintshire and Cheshire. You can read about the background to Between Rivers in the Introduction.

    In this August 2023 edition, we feature works by the contemporary Wrexham-based poet and artist Anne Douglas. She is a member of Cross Border Poets, based at Gladstone’s Library in Hawarden in Flintshire.

    Most of her poems are meditations on natural features. We start with her poem The Alyn, about one of the defining streams of the Between Rivers project. The accompanying illustration, Morning Glory, is a drawing by the poet of convolvulus, often found on the banks of the river.

    The Alyn

    Ambling down Rossett’s Manor Lane
    Passing the River Alyn,
    Part of which traverses our road
    We pass trees, hedgerows and tall trees
    At the side of the fence.
    We hear the dulcet, lyrical sounds
    Of the blackcap,
    The goldfinches flitting down
    Between seed head weeds.
    Later, we pass woodland and pastures
    On which friendly cattle graze,
    Through a country garden the Alyn
    flows.
    We cannot follow the meandering Alyn to its end
    because it disappears through
    neighbouring fields,
    But we meet with the Alyn later as it snakes through kingfisher country:
    they fly low, skimming over water.
    We stop here and listen to the sound
    of the river
    Eventually the river becomes one of the tributaries of the River Dee
    Or the Holy Dee.

     

    Part of the interest of Anne Douglas’ poems is that they often appear at first to be transparent and simple, but then give a sense of something else happening just out of view. In Rose Wall or The Close of the Day this is almost literally the case, as the world of the poem is divided by a wall. It is accompanied by the poet’s drawing Rose Hips.

    Rose Wall or The Close of the Day

    Near a shady wall
    A rose once blossomed
    Fair and tall she grew
    And through a gap
    Her tendril crept
    To dream
    Of what might lie
    On the other side
    She breathed out
    Her fragrance more and more
    It was no different
    On the other side
    Still she grew there
    Near the shady wall
    Just as she would
    Scattering her fragrance
    Forever and a day
    Until her life ebbed away
    The evening sun
    At the close of  day

     

    Although born in Cheshire and being a long-time resident of north-east Wales, Anne Douglas was brought up in the Far East and has travelled extensively. This is reflected in many of her poems, which are sometimes almost haunted by the memory of a distant land. Here is The Bees Must Have A Name For It.

     

    The Bees Must Have A Name For It.

    With the cries of the birds
    Perhaps the honey-guide bird
    I come across a flounce of red flowers
    In a pearlescent dusk
    The bees must have a name for it
    Lazy-blowing fragrance
    Of the carnation border
    Or of the bean blossom
    They must have a name for it too
    In bee language
    Honey flowers
    Here and there
    More and more
    As the branch
    Peeps over the garden wall
    Until at length
    With a final kiss from the sun
    Tiny fragranced flowers close
    And night has come

     

    If you would like to read more of Anne Douglas’ poetry, you will find her poems in the Love Wrexham online magazine and on the Cross Border Poets site.

     



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