Storm of the Century by Ross Thompson, written during lockdown 2020 
Remember ten years ago the country was hit, 
      full force, 
by a cold front so fierce that no amount of grit 
      could thaw the ice.
 No shovel could dig out the snowfall
 and return the sucker-punched country to normal.
 Well, just before the storm drew in, I was rushing 
      through town,
 trying to get to my car, pushing and shoving
       through crowds
 to reach home before the police closed the motorway
 and blocked safe passage and promises I had made.
 Halfway to the bay, I stopped in the skirmish when
       I noticed
 a family, dead still in the melee, staring 
      like tourists
 at a plateau of black cloud covering the tips
 of spires and roofs, dropping down like a mothership,
 unfurling wings of inky black and slate grey curls
       to reveal
 further swirling folds of bitter cold to which we
       would soon yield.
 In years to come, when someone asks me for the facts,
 I will say: waiting for the virus felt like that.