The Sonnets
of Christopher Whitby
This site is no longer being updated as its contents plus new sonnets have been transferred to www.chriswhitby.org.uk. This AOL site is only kept on because it's listed on Google, but I'd prefer you to go to the new site.

Scafell Pike

Half way, we questioned whether to go on
And then again, ten minutes from the top,
Much less in doubt than to reaffirm the need
Within was stronger than the hurtling sleet
That sliced our cheeks, froze lips and closed our eyes.
Bent double, old beggars under sacks indeed,
We pivoted our coming and our going
On outstretched fingers brushing ice-rimed cairn.
When steaming gently in the heated car
We asked once more why on earth we did this,
We knew our answers would not be the same.
For me, remembering turning back from other goals,
I know no better spur to my intent
Than because I am here.
2nd prize in 1991 UK Radio 4 Kaleidosocope Poetry competition.

Breaking Silence

There was a time you'd climb a mountain top
And find yourself alone to contemplate
Whatever promptings God, your inner soul,
Or nature's trenchant silence might evoke.
To do that now, you have to beat the dawn
Or settle for arrival with the dusk,
Having doggedly threaded through the Goretex exodus
To curious looks and snippets of sharp advice.
Now mountains keep their counsel through the day,
But met at the right hour will whisper still
The old familiar charm: "All this I give
To you, as far as eye can see, and more,
If you will but bow down and worship me."
Enveloped in the mist, I bend my knee.
Written for Festival of Mountaineering Literature (can't remember which year).

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