A Cornish Wedding

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This month, Elizabeth Jane Timms joins us with the first in a small series of her Cornish themed poems. 

The boat, hush, the boat is bringing me – and the bluebells

Are ringing out for my wedding –

When I depart, may the dew of the dawn be my diadem

And the morning mist my only veil –

Let the sea’s benediction be upon my brow – in the sign of the cross –

And evermore shall we call this day blessed.

As I climbed the steep hill in my long dress –

A beam of sunlight flickered over my third finger,

Washed upon the sands, I had come to the church,

A daughter of these shores to be given – to you,

As the only gift I had left to bring.

Were the wild berries in my hair –

The ground, our wedding guest, dried its green lashes of grass

On my skirts – as if the place did not wish to give me up.

I ran through the grasses, as the bells of the church rang out

My joy to the distant horizon.

You who were not invited – the wild dandelions,

The lone blackbird!

The morning mist was gone:

The veil had been lifted.

If you enjoyed ‘A Cornish Wedding’ you can read more of our Cornish themed poems hereYou can also follow us on Twitter and Facebook

 

The title image is the copyright © of Derek Harper and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

Elizabeth Jane Timms
Elizabeth Jane Timms is a royal historian, freelance writer, research professional and poet, based in Oxford. She is a member of the Oxford Writers' Circle and the University of Oxford Poetry Society. She writes for journals, magazines, newsletters and the web. She divides her time between Oxford and London.

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