Ruling Out The Equaliser
Tinpot dictator? Capable
enough to snuff out
the Thatcher brat’s attempted
coup,
to woo a Swiss dictator who
understands
the need for PR stunts
like this award of half a Cup
of Nations
to a microstate where oil
flows like blood.
Face is all, money the make-up to salvage it.
From his second-best purse, the dictator’s son
empties a year’s earnings of half the population
at the feet of the “National Lightning”,
151st best team in our world.
Opponents, like officials, calculate their due,
and duly act as though they’ve got it.
Lightning strikes Libya and Senegal
from the path to glory,
before orange-shirted “Elephants”
trample the usurpers,
restore a semblance of merit
to the spectacle,
which no-one watches live.
The circus moves on. South Africa next.
The world’s attention floodlights fail.
A shroud once more encases
Equatorial Guinea’s heart of
darkness.
What happens now? History regurgitates.
Oil powers the wheels of bulldozers,
clearing shanties for developers,
not for the souls who live there.
Migrants get harassed by bribe-sucking cops
with inflated stop-and-search concessions.
Students are acquainted with jails,
the continent’s worst, lest they protest
when summit-bound dignitaries
come from afar, some months hence.
A news blackout leaves the rest
to our imagination.
The sport itself still searches
among warehouses full of its gold
for the beauty it has sloughed:
cynical, corrupt, creeping
every day closer to the apex of its hubris,
every moment more akin to Equatorial Guinea.
Bryan Murphy is a
former teacher and translator who now concentrates on his own words. A lifelong
soccer fan, he divides his time among England, Italy and the wider world. His work has recently
appeared in Descant, Eunoia Review, Indigo Rising, Rose & Thorn, The Camel
Saloon, The Pygmy Giant, The Rainbow Rose, The View from Here and Transparent
Words. A novella of ideas, Goodbye
Padania, is forthcoming. www.bryanmurphy.eu
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