Quiet creativity...........
Alice 'Doreen' wrote, throughout her life; here is a collection of her writing from the period 1990 - 2007.

To John, my husband

Daily, hourly, we say the Mantra

The Mantra that is needed to fill the yawning gap

The physically felt gap within the breast

Like a hole in a Henry Moore sculpture

I love you; never said enough

Never too often

I love you, I love you, I love you

Over all our years

More years than we have to come

Said daily, said hourly,

Binding us ever tightly, my love,

Till that final terrible day

When even then

Hourly and by the minute

We will still love you and I

Later

Do you believe in ‘Later’?

No ‘Later’ never comes

Now is the only time

But why?

Now is the only time, tomorrow is the future

Yesterday has gone.

‘Later’ is the let-out for leaving work undone

‘Later’ makes no garden and leaves the dishes dirty,

Friends without a call and old folk unvisited.

‘Later’ is a never time

The only time is now.

I’ll finish 'Later' - more 'Later'.

Time

She lifted the pebble, warm from the sun, smoothed by the sea.

She loved its shape, almost snuggling it in her palm like a small bird.

Artists she’d read about – Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth would collect those stones that spoke to their inner conscience and use the shapes to inspire their sculptures.

She looked and was aware of the ages of time that rested in her grip – ‘dinner time children’ called, and she threw the stone into the sea.

Time never runs out, with the rain dripping on the roof. Move out of the way, splash, splash. Never mind, the music keeps going and the children’s voices.

How much time have we got?

Who knows, here today, gone tomorrow, ephemeral, we are all just on a journey, a bee has six weeks, we are luckier than that, well, mostly.

Stones are wonderful keepers of time millions of years, lift one, hold a million years in your palm and know that you are just a blip on the world’s calendar.

Whilst at Leisure

Whilst at leisure, she did lie upon the cliff

Her form elongated, her eyes surveying

The kingdom far below.

Inland, the white clouds changed to grey,

Sun combined with shadow, warm with cool.

Above, the gulls explored the airy sky,

Circling in drafts of air to higher altitude

Before speed diving to impact

On a shoal of silvery fish.

Growing Up

At seven, I don’t remember much,

Oh yes, playing in the fields and waiting,

As yet another Nazi flying bomb, stopped

Its thunderous roar above our heads,

And we suddenly held our breathes listening for the bang,

Before our play carried on again.

At seventeen, when youthful beauty had been bestowed

And the grateful knowledge of what a smile could do

A flutter of eyelids – oh yes, flirting,

So delightful. Ah!

At twenty-seven – thirty-seven – forty-seven

With the joys, sorrows and frustrations of a family growing

It seemed endless, endless, while being lived

And now, but a blink of an eye.

What about seventy? – No, never, never seventy!

Yes, now – small aches, small pains, stiffness in joints

The need to take things easy

The joy of friendships long held

The joy of an old and loving husband and family, my dear family.

Lemon

The old woman sliced the lemon and forced it down on the old glass squeezer before pouring the juice into her jug of water. The smell, nothing else quite like the smell of lemons, changed the air of the tiny scullery, that and the steam from the kettle boiling away on the gas ring. ‘Lots of sugar little girl’, she said. Cooling the drink enough for the shivering child to sip. Colds are nasty things, but lovely lemonade will make you feel much better.

'Yes, said the little girl, ‘it does, Nana’

Senses

Smell

The smell fills the nose. In the mouth, the acid juice almost stings, cleaning the palate as it lingers.

Zest squirts in the air as the peel is pressed.

Petrol – Gas thickens the air, vapour affects the breath. Horrid, wish it wasn’t there.

The Smokey fumes from an old car that needs attention. Noise now, strain, clanking gears. Man taking over all the beauty. Making roads, noise, danger.

There are good things too, help at hand. A personal flying carpet, a willing stead that carry’s you to wonderful places.

Touch

Tells you temperature, hardness – softness, things so tiny you can hardly see them, a prick from a thorn or cactus in the skin, a grain of sand, many grains, cool and silky ebbing through fingers, catching your nails.

Bath water – how warm, just right for me, too hot for baby – depth just right for baby – not enough for mum.

Slippery, shivery silk, soft, warm, thick wool, velvet for luxury against your skin. Texture of cloth, damp for washing the floor, coarse in your hands, appropriate to wipe up the mess.

Wood freshly sawn, splintery-smell, smell its resin, sanded now in old furniture, stroke it with a gentle hand and be embraced by it in return.

Gravel in the hurt knee. Tension, tension against the coming injection, ‘go soft dear and it won’t hurt near so much’. Feel the relaxation, feel the deep, slow breath in your lungs, feel it raise your abdomen. The breath, up by your shoulders, fast through running, taste the blood in your throat, tension, tension let it go, slow, slow.

Feel the caress of love and go soft, feel the grip in your heart and stomach when you say goodbye and may never meet again. ‘What if? Oh, dear God, no’.

Feel the lash of the wind, a branch hitting you across the face, the briar scratching a bare leg.

How can she manage? She can’t see any longer, and now the sense of touch has almost gone, too. How do you find a tablet or squeeze the bottle of eye drops when your fingers no longer impart the information?

‘Ping the bowl, does it ring sweetly? No? But I can barely see any crack’. ‘Feel just there – oh yes, a tiny roughness’.

‘I need a coat, I’m goose flesh all over, I feel the cold, I’m shivering, I’m shivering’.

Sound

Ringing in the ears, shushing, the constant tick of a clock, and counting the time.

Tick of the radiators' metal expanding with heat – contracting as it cools. Plastic does too.

Tick, tick, tick. Laughter of children sounds of the playground sweetly raucous, whistles then quiet. The constant throb of engines – cars, trucks, motorcycles, even deep in the country away from roads, an aeroplane buzzes or a tractor masks the sweet song of birds. When I was little, I loved the sound of silence; it’s rare now that all the mechanical sounds are absent.

Beat out the rhythm on the drum, rhythms that vibrate to ancient, deep ancestral memories.

Dance to the beginning song of the Foxtrot. Relax to Mozart. Cover your ears to so many decibel dirge and hope your hearing will recover.

Precious hearing when its depleted you are an outsider to the jokes and information – ‘sorry say it again, look at me don’t shout, not all my hearing has gone, just certain wave lengths, so they say’.

Sounds can make you feel happy, relaxed, joyful, sad, ill, or pained. Sound incorporates you into the group. Deaf people are excluded. If you are blind, you are cut off from distance, but you can still hear the gentle voice of someone you love. If you’re deaf, you must feel as if you are in a bubble – where even your loved one has to speak loudly – I love you, shouted, does not have the same feeling, the subtlety of warmth, the gentleness. So, it must sound angry.

‘Not thinking Aloud’

We are a reflection of the way we are perceived.

I am loved by John and my family, and I know friends like me. That gives me a warm glow of comfort and delight, and I hope that I also give to others love and warmth.

Is that very pleasure, that feeling of importance of position in the world that reason why people who rise to eminence in one field or another, go a bit mad?

This reflected love admiration – whether it be for being good at kicking a ball, singing, making money or in politics, ‘goes to the head’ and makes them dazzled and sometimes quite mad.

‘Not thinking Aloud’

We are a reflection of the way we are perceived.

I am loved by John and my family, and I know friends like me. That gives me a warm glow of comfort and delight, and I hope that I also give to others love and warmth.

Is that very pleasure, that feeling of importance of position in the world that reason why people who rise to eminence in one field or another, go a bit mad?

This reflected love admiration – whether it be for being good at kicking a ball, singing, making money or in politics, ‘goes to the head’ and makes them dazzled and sometimes quite mad.

Sleeper - Painting

I made the ‘Sleeper’ picture in the 1900s – 93, I think.

At the time, I was painting every day and never finished one picture before the next was well started.

The germ of this painting was my concern about my mother, who was 90 years old and had dementia; she was a child.

I think at that time I was aware that it was easy to sleep away one’s life and wake into a world of the very old.

The chair symbolises the presence of my father, whom I never knew. He died when I was eighteen months old. Mother used to say about an old blue kitchen seat, ‘your daddy painted that’.

The way I painted then was to expand a thought or a feeling by drawing constantly – reams of old computer paper that came from my husband's business, were what I used, and because I could not paint once the light became dim – artificial light was no good unless the picture had been started in that light, the colour changed so much, in the changed light, when I drew at night.

My pictures were often painted in series, exploring the idea that concerned me in different ways, and my work was nearly always about issues that worried me or memories of my childhood.

For some reason I can’t remember now, I just stopped the work and several years passed before, with the help of a great book called ‘The Artist’s Way’ by Julia Cameron, and the encouragement of mainly Edna Coatsworth and always the support of my family, I was able to do some work again.

Edna was the one with the whip – ‘you must do it, you must start again, you can do it’.

But anyway, I haven’t gone back to my old way, which, if I’m honest, I think produced the work I most enjoyed doing, and I enjoyed using my paint in that way, which I suppose looks to many, quite laboured, because it is.

The flags picture was the first one I did when I began painting again; I find it joyous and again my friend was quite instrumental in its production.

Now I spend most of my time writing and E’s class is keeping the door open for when the painter takes over from the writer.

Poem for Thursday

The sea is milling again

Creaming at the edge and far out

Billowing, the wind growls and stills

The curling waves crash, pounding the shore

And crows, tossed in the boisterous air

Like rags from a witch’s gown.

France – Holidays

Memories and warmth

Friendly people

Colour, markets, baskets

Open country, wine and food

Sun and sea – fish for supper

Too much motoring

Smart women in Paris

Paintings in the Louvre

Trying to communicate

Not being understood

Laughing at mistakes

Always greeting politely

Bon jour Madame, bon jour Monsieur

Ferry travel

Grapes and smells

Sketching in the rain

Swimming in the sea

Going topless

Buying lots of fruit

Forgetting what I’ve learnt

Reflections in the Pool

In the still rock pool

Hypnotised by sky and floating cloud

Shells I see shaped long and thin, broken

Mirrored sea shells resembling blue belles

Trailing seaweed wafts the deep

Urchins and anemones, crabs and snails

Shards of bygone days

Reflections of another day

Of memories and dreams

In the deep rock pool, I see

Just me.

I'm not there!

I'm not there

I speak, and no one hears

I question, and no one answers

Their voices dart around me

Avoiding the void

Do you not see me, notice, observe?

No, you're not there

Here I am.

Am I not wise?

Am I not interesting?

Have I no longer any worth?

Transparent with age

I'm not there.

Alice Doreen - Writing in 1991

Painting is OK.

Writing is difficult -why?

Doing anything without question cuts out the need to think through what you are about –

Is that the difference between the intelligent and the simple mind? Or is it also the difference between the active and the lazy?

I know I’m lazy.

Why do I paint?

What do I like about others’ paintings?

How can I paint without bothering too much about other folk, say or think of your results?

This applies mainly to the uninformed – “I don’t know anything about art, but I know what I like” type of person. In reality, I don’t worry too much about them. Yet I do need to be encouraged somehow – I had a faze during this year (1991), when I felt so depressed by my work, I couldn’t do anything for about three weeks. Thank goodness I knew I had to get something ready to show – I might still have been in the doldrums.

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My pictures often stem from my sketches, based on memories or whatever. It’s as if I recognise someone or I’m intrigued by some action. It’s useful to me to have the sketches on single sheets – not in a book. I can then sift through them or pin them up, put one next to another – I have masses of them - and just don’t wish to part with them – my summer pictures are in them.

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Alice Doreen was always concerned that, like her Mother and two of her Aunts, she would suffer from dementia in later life. This poem reflects her thoughts on this subject. Alice Doreen passed away, unexpectedly, in her sleep on the 1st January 2019. She is buried in the Silverwood Woodland Cemetery, on the Isle of Wight.

A Calm, Peaceful End

Do not prevent me from my sweet rest

When time has smoothed my mind

So that I am lost in a fog of forgetfulness.

And husband, children, family, friends

Are distant or completely gone.

I’ve seen the bewilderment of those

Whom I have known and loved, when

They’re made to stumble on, frightened and angry.

Do not give me magic pills and potions

Against the rest that nature does intend.

When disease and pain crack at my old bones

And strength has ebbed away, leaving me at

The mercy of the kindness of others.

However much they love or think they owe,

I’m owed nothing but a calm, peaceful end.

September 2007

Alice Doreen Louise McIntosh (1934 - 2019)Write your text here...