25 March 2026

London Lights

Leaf 341 – Looking Back

 

Ronald Lampitt - London Nightscape


An homage to my home city, so far away …

 

 

Lights of the city

spanning the river

– London aglow!

 

 

 

24 March 2026

The Copse

Leaf 340 – Art Inspired

 

Shima Tamami - Forest Song (1962)


This poem was loosely inspired by two things: Firstly, by Shima Tamami’s print, ‘Forest Song’ (1962). And secondly, by a long walk to Chanctonbury Ring on England’s South Downs when I was around ten years old. Chanctonbury Ring itself is a ring of beech trees, originally planted in 1760, along the remnants of a circular, prehistoric earthen rampart atop Chanctonbury Hill. The prehistoric site’s exact purpose is not known, although it is thought to have been used variously, either as a hill fort, a civic refuge, a livestock enclosure, or as a religious sanctuary; although it was certainly used for the latter purpose during the later Roman occupation of Britain, with two distinct temple or religious cult-like buildings having been found on the site. At the time of visiting, this unknown, pre-Christian religious association really caught hold of my overly-fertile imagination and I felt as though there was something darkly magical moving with the wind roaring loudly through the boughs of these tall trees and the raucous cawing of sinister, black-feathered crows. Sadly, not long afterwards, the ring was broken, as many of the trees were destroyed by the Great Storm of 1987.

 

 

Wind shivers a copse,

where druids once

communed with crows.

 

 

 

Ian Hawfinch - Chanctonbury Ring (Geograph)


Chanctonbury Ring and other archaeological sites (Ordnance Survey, 1934)


23 March 2026

Earth and Sky

Leaf 339 – Reflections

 

Alexandra Buckle - Winter Reflections (2023)


As above, so below ... (see also, Leaf 9 & Leaf 156).

 

 

Mirroring

earth and sky

– Rushmere.

 

 

 

22 March 2026

Warmth of the Pine

Leaf 338 – Looking Back

 

Ashikaga Shizuo - Benimashiko, or Long-tailed Rosefinch (c.1950s)


The evergreen pine is weighted with symbolism in both poetry and religion, particularly in Japan – denoting purity, resilience, and longevity.

 

 

Two young birds –

blushed by the

warmth of the pine.

 

 

 

21 March 2026

Concentric Circles

Leaf 337 – Art Inspired

 

M.C. Escher - Rippled Surface (1950)


Two circles set vertically and overlapping, rather like a Venn diagram, is an ancient symbol for water – ‘vesica piscis’ (Latin, meaning ‘fish bladder’). The figure appears in the first proposition of Euclid’s ‘Elements’ as a means of producing an equilateral triangle (two, in fact, one mirroring the other) by means of a compass and straight edge. I first came across this symbol and its relationship to water at Glastonbury, where its stylised motif has been used to decorate the cover of the Chalice Well – a sacred spring. As such, it is also said to be a symbol of fertility, and of the divine, representing the meeting point of the spiritual and the physical, of heaven and earth (‘as above, so below’). Hence it is frequently used in Christian contexts, to depict a halo or aureola, or the ichthys – fish symbol, an early motif for denoting Christ or Christian belief/followers. I’ve often been taken by the way in which bodies of water tend to refract in concentric circles, for instance when it rains, and how when two or more such refractions meet they merge much in the same manner as this ancient geometric symbol – similar to the way in which it is depicted here, in this 1950 print by the artist, M.C. Escher, which has captured two ripples, two concentric circles on the cusp of meeting under the moon.

 

 

Concentric

circles merge –

ripples on water.

 

 

 

20 March 2026

Saint Cuthbert

Leaf 336 – Looking Back

 

Lindisfarne, or Holy Island


Having long been fascinated by the Lindisfarne Gospels and the life of Saint Cuthbert, I visited Durham and Lindisfarne in the early 1990s. The Cathedral at Durham is one of the most imposing and atmospheric in the country, and Lindisfarne is one of the most beautiful and rugged, out-of-the-way places on the Northumbrian coast. Consequently, I’ve long thought of Cuthbert as the real patron saint of olde England.

 

 

SAINT CUTHBERT

 

Sleeping under solid stone –

 

A holy spirit

borne by the birds

over Lindisfarne.

 

 

 

Ronald Lampitt - Durham Cathedral




Lindisfarne Photograph Credit: Ian Capper (Geograph)

19 March 2026

Night Cycle

Leaf 335 – Looking Back

 

Motorcyclist, France (1905)


In the long hot summer of 2003, I was living far out in the countryside, commuting into London each day. This entailed an eight-mile bicycle ride each morning and again each evening, which soon made me fit as a fiddle. Setting off on the bike before 5:30am, I’d usually be home around 5-6pm – except on Friday’s, when I’d spend the evening in the pub with friends and colleagues, catching one of the last trains home. Heading out into the unlit country lanes always felt mad enough, but similarly daring myself to free-wheel down steep hills in the pitch dark was always happily enervated by a little, lingering Dutch courage!

 

 

NIGHT CYCLE

 

All my faith

centred on two wheels –

clinging to my ride.