Cragg Vale Coiners – 17th June 2026

Bronze Age ashes sleep to the north,
Roman coins whisper further south.
Down in Cragg Vale,
King David the counterfeiter
shaved gold by the candle's light.
The Mytholmroyd Bridge remembers
flooding at the Gallows Pole
and every hanged man's shadow
on York Tyburn stones.

Shared with dVerse Quadrille #250 – myth, where De Jackson sent me off to Wikipedia to search for information about Mytholmroyd, a place I’ve never heard of before.


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Offence Or Defence?

Vulnerable to the whims of fortune
Offence is endlessly exhausting
Make a flexible, resilient defence
With philosophy, undistorting

The Pedal Point – 16th June 2026

Quick and dirty ChatGPT image

I am not a ray of sunshine….
The sky seems full of loneliness,
aching to be more than a thought.

I’m neither sad nor bored, just………thin.

Stretched across time 

like a wire of infinite length, 

losing all its tension, its purpose.

A whisper in a hurricane,

or a single, endless note in a symphony 

that constantly changes its tune.

Let’s see who remains

once the air of mystery fades;
no apologies for my lack of interest.

Along with the two lines linked, this poem very much paraphrases someone else’s writing, but I didn’t take note of the author! I guess this could be considered a cento as these lines, and my own, got smashed together, inspired by this Substack post by Luciana Cole. I can identify with the feeling, though I, myself, am much brighter these days.
A pedal point is a sustained note during which the harmony above it changes in some way so that the overall sound becomes dissonant.


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

No Shame In Needing Help

Someone helped you when you were born
You understood that you could always ask
No one will throw down their scorn
If you ask for help with a difficult task

Brighter Doings – 15th June 2026

So fuckin’ far behind, I can’t catch up,
overwhelmed with flashing multiple screens;
begging attention without a backup,
struggling to understand what it all means;

And today I don’t even like the words
I read and wrote across all the pages;
it’s always nouns when all I want is verbs;
I suppose it’s just one of those stages.

Maybe tomorrow will be different and everything will shine that much brighter.

Inspired by various things that I read and wrote today.


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Listening Accomplishes More

Even with only one mouth
We can’t seem to shut up
If you ever feel in doubt
Stop joining in the hubbub

Where Has the Time Gone? – 14th June 2026

The old tree before the door has grown new shoots,
my toenails have grown thick and black;

The dead tree in the yard is blooming again

but each day, I shed more skin;

I've held on to so many words over a lifetime,
they are still rattling around,

- stored them in a head of white hair,
- stored them in crow’s feet.


In my memory, a girl with little feet
and a chubby little mouth

Waddling around the yard
where ducks and chickens peck at seeds;

I gave her my love for a lifetime
watching her fly away

All for the sound of "mum" and "dad"
;
all given to the golden prince across the valley;


Where has the time gone?

I was holding on to it so tightly;

I haven't yet enjoyed youth and I'm already old
my star descending;

Raising sons and daughters for a lifetime
will I meet them again in the next life?

I must tell myself so

My mind is full of children crying and laughing;

my mind, crying and laughing;


Where has the time gone?

I was holding on to it in hope;

I still haven't taken care of you properly,
and my eyes are already failing;

I will dig a comfortable hole in the earth
for our future;

Daily necessities for a lifetime
now,
it’s your turn;

Do not forget,
in the blink of an eye, all that's left is a face full of wrinkles,
All that’s left is a dead tree with new shoots.

The words in bold are an annotation of the Chinese song 时间都去哪儿了 found here at the East Asia Student site. I have taken them and added to them (for better or worse?)


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Try The Other Handle

Every event has two handles
Grab the one that can be lifted
The other is a battle against yourself
And does not want to be shifted

Explainer – 13th June 2026

We’d better make these rhymes easy
to read.
I’m getting tired, I must concede.
You see,
the Hendecastich is a pain
to write.
This nonsense written here, I might
explain
is a first attempt, a challenge
to try.
Now it’s done, let me say goodbye!

Written for dVerse: Legs Eleven.
The Hendecastich by Michael Fantina
11 line poem
1 stanza
alternates iambic feet of four (tetrameter) and one (monameter)
(ignored!)
i.e. syllables: 8-2-8-2-8-2-8-2-8-2-8
rhyme scheme: abbacddceff


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Life Is A Battlefield

You must keep watch like a soldier
And do everything commanded
You’ve been stationed at a key post
Do not take this role for granted

Farewell, Students – 12th June 2026

I’ve been lucky enough to watch you grow
And you’ve changed more than you will ever know
Now’s come the time for me to watch you go
A little sad, but I’m satisfied so.

A reflection on the annual ritual of watching your students move forward with their lives.
Written with 2025’s GloProWriMo Day 22 prompt in mind:
Write a poem about something you’ve done – whether it’s music lessons, or playing soccer, crocheting, or fishing, or learning how to change a tyre – that gave you a kind of satisfaction, and perhaps still does.


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

A Trained Mind Is Better Than Any Script

Wishing to be told what to do
Is no form of training
When pounds to the face come for you
Being ready is better than complaining

The Puncturers – 11th June 2026

legalised punctures
the symbols of
burnt stars
branded flesh and
bloodied devices
gut percussion
a pound of flesh
punctuated
without protection

pound
   pound
      pound
those punctilios
until they come around
where bodies of evidence
may no longer be found

everything is legitimate

Shared with dVerse Poetics – unpunctuated and inspired by the (as yet unwatched) Bodies of Evidence documentary


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Just Don’t Make Things Worse

Anger and grief only add more fuel
So stop digging that hole you’re in
Negative energy is the devil’s tool
To ensure you keep on digging

Truffles – 10th June 2026

Very much inspired and paraphrased from this SubStack post by Megan Falley about shifting attention

Nudge the kaleidoscope

to change the view.


Welcome a rainbow

out of the rain.


Dance through the diagnosis;

make magic of the mundane.


Amongst the mud,

hunt for truffles of joy.


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

You Can Do It

If it can be done, it can be done by you
Don’t be jealous, take it as inspiration
Attitude will propel you forward in all that you do
Countering bitterness and desperation

A Precautionary Grace – 9th June 2026

Sweet Juliets
Doe-eyed and delicious
Not for eating
Yet quietly seditious

Ceramic skin
Smoother than porcelain
Fingers get burned
Pushing all the way in

Swaying saplings
Fluttering in the breeze
Blooms unfolding
Inviting with unease

Little sirens
Prettier than peaches
Laid bare, the soul
Where temptation reaches


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Solve Problems Early

Problems gather their strength
To boil your blood
Cross the river at the source
And nip it in the bud

These Iron Nails – 8th June 2026

From The Globe and Mail

South, a thirty-hour wound in a steel intestine
digesting human hope in a waking dream.
Stepping into battle armed with a naive heart;
a bitter baptism reveals the city’s scheme.

In a school of unlearning, identities erased,
drifting through days, haunting his own life like a spectre,
a walking zombie in an abyss of solitude.
Salvation binds him to a lifetime debt collector.

Novelty, a fragile perfume of exploitation,
earning a sixpence without seeking the moon.
Youthful energy spent with diminishing returns,
each hour a grain of sand in an unending dune.

Wild lychees will blossom from this barren soil,
a slow transformation as the silkworm will awaken.
Maps appearing within peripheral vision,
unearthed emotions light the roads to be taken.

Scrapheap bound, a common grave for these iron nails;
authentic wildflowers seek the soils of progress.
The family of dreamers was a forest grown overnight,
only to be cleared away by the dawn of their success.

Another poem based on Adrift in the South by Xiao Hai in Granta magazine, detailing the life of migrant labour in China. I managed to suitably condense this one into just five stanzas!


Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Brick By Boring Brick

This is your life you’re building
Surely things will get in the way
To make your house, the holes get filled in
Minutes to hours, day by day