WHERE
CAN I GO?
Six o’clock Wednesday afternoon and what is
there to do but sit, write poetry and wonder what became of this life
This life that seems trapped in this
pitiful excuse for a town with no friends to speak off and no hope in sight
Today I texted three people I know and only
got one reply and that said no, they were too busy to see me today
But from the other two, who I used to hold
dear, not a word and I grow curious as to why that should be?
I really ain’t got a clue as to what to do
about this situation except save up, get out and go someplace new
But where can I go? What can I do?
In this town and on my wage there is simply
no way to comprehend
How I’ll end up saving enough to move back
to London or any other place near people I know
So won’t I just be damning myself to
another few years of moving someplace new just because it seems like the only
move?
I’m not sure in this state of mind that
would be the best thing to do so again I ask what I can do.
Move to Paris for a job in a bookshop? Not
now, since the Front National and the rise in rents to something I can’t afford
Well then where? Sometimes I dream of just
upping sticks and moving some place real cheap
Where I can write and work and have no
interference from people who seem to conspire against me at every damn turn
Where a part-time job at a skint retail
chain will allow me to live without some financial aid from this damn
government
Where the people don’t hate me for reasons
I cannot comprehend
So again I ask where I can go.
DRUNK,
GOING TO THE PUB
Drunk all week and just arranged another
for tonight
A quiet night down the pub is impossible
for me
I’ll drink at the bar until I’m grateful
that it’s just downhill
From any pub in town I just walk down the
hill
So no matter where I am, how drunk I get I
know I’ll make it as long as I keep my legs
The pub tonight is one where the last time
I went some young little scummer hit me in the head
I hope he ain’t there tonight cos I’ve been
drunk all week
And tonight he might get his rebuttable
THE
BALLAD OF LITTLE SADIE
Sadie looks on,
Numbed by the shot she needs to perform
She stands in a body stocking from neck to
toe
As she grips her leather jacket tight close
To stop her frail body from the coldness of
the night,
Aged eighteen, she looks about thirty as
her habit gets to a hundred a day
She’s only been at this for a short while
but it’s already too late
Some girl she’d run into on a street corner
I can’t work without it, the elder sister
did relate
And now she’s doing grams a day
She looks on curious, even whilst out of it
Who will it be next and what will they
want?
Her pimp talks harshly with a couple of
tough guys
She cowers in the corner hoping, beyond
hope, they will not be her last.
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