Haiku: Freedom

man wearing a black and white suit in a grassy area
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Freedom? What freedom?
You should know better than this
My cynical world

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Poor Little Pluto

galaxy stars illustration
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Poor little Pluto
he is no celebrity –
a wandering star

copyright Francis Barker 2019

https://www.express.co.uk/news/science/1201142/NASA-latest-news-space-agency-jim-bridenstine-pluto-planet-star-washington-DC

Tanka: Old Father Thames

buildings near body of water
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Poor Old Father Thames
The mudlarks uncovered him
on the cold foreshore
He has turned into old pipes
and porcelain bric-a-brac

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Poem: Cow

black and white dairy cow s head
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A cow bestrides the sea wall
blocking our path, dark
eyes staring us out while 

slovenly chewing
the winter grass. I don’t think
she gives a damn about 

me and even less
about you – I think she’s
sussed us out, that you find her 

disturbing. She has
no opinion on these views either
side, the expanses of fen 

drably bedecked
by sparse copse and spire,
the salt marsh 

dividing old kingdoms and ways
of speech. Her only view is
of us, that her might is right and 

that we shall not pass easily

copyright Francis Barker 2019

Today is Saint Edmund’s Day, original Patron Saint of England

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Today marks the feast of Saint Edmund, King of the East Angles, martyred brutally by the Danes (Vikings, Northmen, Norse) in 869 AD.

Whatever we make of saints, they are said at times to intercede in human affairs. Before King Edward the Confessor became the ‘official’ patron saint of England sometime after the Norman Conquest, Saint Edmund the Martyr was usually evoked as England’s most important saint.

Later, probably as a result of the crusades, and also maybe for practical commercial and military reasons too, the warrior saint George was adopted as patron saint of England and he has remained so since the 14th century. St. George is also patron saint of other countries and cities, such as Georgia and Genoa and Italy.

Nevertheless, there have been moves in latter years to try to make Saint Edmund the official patron of England again, possibly because he has definite historical and cultural associations with England, and was an English king.

However, in an increasingly secular world, such moves may be going against the grain of popular opinion.

copyright Francis Barker 2019