written and posted by members of Lancashire Dead Good Poets' Society

Saturday 2 April 2022

(Gar)dens

A proud father writes: my youngest daughter got married on Wednesday, at Tower Hamlets Town Hall in London. It was a wonderful day. She and her partner had organised it all themselves and it was an absolute delight to see Lucy and Christopher so radiant and being feted by so many happy and loyal friends.

I wanted to write them a poem to commemorate the event, and started off drafting a villanelle because I thought the formal structure would be appropriate to the occasion, but I soon felt constrained by that format, so let it outgrow its appointed nineteen lines and it ended up as Villanelle Overgrown. (There's a footnote on the technicalities for anyone remotely interested.)

I wanted also to give it some universal as well as personal relevance, and I hope it succeeds in that. I recited it in lieu of a speech by the father of the bride and it seemed to be well-received. Fortuitously, this week's blog theme happens to be (Gar)dens, so I figured it might be all right to share it with you, given its extended metaphor.

By coincidence, I've read poetry in Tower Hamlets Town Hall before, (way back in 1981 if memory serves - I was living in Bethnal Green at the time), at an event hosted by the poet Adrian Mitchell.

Autumn 1960, Edward Bawden
I figured this blog would also be a good opportunity to share an artwork (above) by a favourite British artist, as it also fits the given theme. Here then, dedicated one more time with love to Lucy and Chris, is their wedding poem:

Villanelle Overgrown
Is it a garden, though? A metaphor
worked to good effect since Arcadian days,
when husbandry was strong and wifery

unschooled, has changed co-ordinates,
transformed its landscape in subtle ways.
Is it a garden, though? We’re met here for

the intertwining of this couple’s fates,
as pairs have done with loving gaze
since husbandry was long and wifery

untooled, unphased by all that lies in wait,
happy to intone those ritual wedding lays.
Is it a garden, though? Not an allotment

nor a flinty field behind entrapping gates,
after we broke the manacle ‘obeys’
when husbandry was wrong and wifery

unfooled, established marriage emancipates.
The more it evolves, the more resolute it stays.
Is it a garden, though? Beyond the honeyed wall
is husbandry a living art? And modern wifery,

does it thrive still behind creosoted picket fences
and those sparrow-filled suburban privet thickets,
or where window-boxes brighten high-rise flats,
out in the tidy yards of red-brick terraced houses
and in cottages with honeysuckle round the door?

It was always half-jokingly said ‘to the husband
the potting-shed, to the wife the herbal beds’ but
where she can mow the lawn as well as he and he
can pick and trim the salad greens as well as she,
then notwithstanding Eden (we know that story),

the metaphor still serves for marriage as a garden
whose happy aspect, fertile loam, when tended to
with love, will yield up bounteous lives botanical,
an arbour filled with ardour, a nursery of joys, at
harvesting, a mellow fruitfulness that never cloys.










* Footnote: A villanelle is a 19-line poem consisting of five tercets and a quatrain, in which line 1 (the first refrain) repeats at lines 6, 12 and 18; line 3 (the second refrain) repeats at lines 9, 15 and 19; lines 2, 5, 8, 11, 14, and 17 share an end rhyme; and lines 4, 7, 10, 13 and 16 share another end rhyme. When I found the form too constricting (in structure and length) for what I wanted to say, I let it break free from line 19 onwards, as befits the garden plot.


Thanks for reading, S ;-)

38 comments:

KathCurt said...

Something for them to keep and treasure.

Jill Reidy said...

Beautiful, Steve. ❤️ And I love that picture. x

Jeanie Buckingham said...

Wicked Villanelle.

Bill Allison said...

Your poem is wonderful. I only hope I can write something so beautiful for my daughter's wedding- hopefully a long time off yet.

Cynthia said...

Lovely Steve and I remember Adrian Mitchell as a powerful reader of his work, a stunning performer πŸ˜€

Boz said...

Awesome, la!

Saskia Parker said...

That is so lovely. Congratulations. x

Ross Madden said...

What a splendid thing to be able to do. πŸ‘

Lucy said...

I just want to say thank you again for writing such a brilliant poem - so many people commented on how good it was and it really meant a lot to us - it was a great day.❤️

Anonymous said...

Very well done, Mr R.

Miriam Fife said...

A lovely poem, Steve, and I'm sure a great memento for your daughter and son-in-law.

Lizzie Fentiman said...

Congratulations for the wedding and for the poem. It was a lovely idea and I like particularly the 'overgrown' part, some great imagery. Much happiness to your daughter and her beau.

Lynne Carter said...

Congratulations. What happy news. I loved the overgrown villanelle Steve, especially the phrase "bounteous lives botanical" - made me think of gin for some reason. πŸ’š

Nigella D said...

I loved it. Very well done. And congratulations.

Rod Downey said...

As others have observed, what a lovely thing to do. I really liked the 'moral' of your poem as well. I'm sure William Morris, John Ball et al would have approved. πŸ‘

Writer21 said...

Lovely Steve; congratulations and all the best to the bride and groom!

Glad you had such a happy day.

Thanks for the nuggets of wisdom in your work and the heart at the centre of your poem.

Bella Jane Barclay said...

How wonderful, a lovely poem. How long did it take to fashion?

Ben Templeton said...

Very good Steve. I love the poem and the Edward Bawden illustration and congratulations to your daughter on her marriage. It's a pleasant change to have some good news.

Gemma Gray said...

Congratulations on the wedding and the villanelle+. I wish your daughter and son-in-law every happiness. I particularly like the way you've used husbandry and wifery through the poem to reflect social change in the institution.

Deke Hughes said...

Very well done Steve. That Villanelle (overgrown) is some technical achievement. Congratulations to you and to the happy couple it was written for. (No wonder they were delighted.)

Steve Rowland said...

Thanks everyone for the kind words. I'm available for commissions (only joking)!

Jayne Moorhouse said...

Congratulations to the happy couple. Well done to the proud father. Thank you for another wonderful and knowledgeable read.

Theresa Miller said...

It was good to see you, A most excellent occasion. Your poem at the wedding went down very well.

Debbie Laing said...

How lovely. I'm really happy for you all.

Dani Merakli said...

It's a fabulous poem, must have taken you hours.

Mark II Ford said...

Bravo for the brilliant poem and congratulations to your daughter and her husband.

Jambo said...

Nice one! (All that husbandry and wifery, very cleverly worked.) Congrats to your daughter and her husband.

Penny Lockhart said...

That's beautiful Steve, as well as very cleverly done. And what happy news for you and your family amid so much that's depressing in the world right now.

CI66Y said...

I say, that's excellent. Well done and congratulations to the married couple. You can tell I've got no football to worry over this afternoon! (See you in the Championship next season.)

Charlotte Mullins said...

Congratulations to your daughter and her husband. I hope they will be very happy. I loved your poem Steve, especially the way it bursts the confines of the villanelle like a mad flowering.πŸ‘

bob c said...

Belated congratulations to Lucy and Chris, and happy father/poet. ����

Noragh Montgomerie said...

A really lovely idea, and so well executed. Congratulations all round.

Dan Francisco said...

Great news. Great poetry. Every happiness to them.

Zoe Nikolopoulou said...

Wonderful. Congratulations.

Sahra Carezel said...

Brilliant! ❤️

Tony Sedgwick said...

What a great composition for your daughter's wedding. πŸ‘

Laxmiben Hirani said...

A great gift for a wedding present, picture included Steve, just beautifulπŸ’•πŸ’“πŸ’•

Tif Kellaway said...

Wonderful words. Congratulations all round. πŸ‘