Boundary Road 11:15am
These are
the people,
For whom
the plastic spoon
Was their
birth right,
Menial work
their inheritance.
These are
the people
Who live hand
to mouth,
Benefit
cheque shopping days
In pound
shops and discount stores,
For whom
whole weekends are wasted
F**king and
drinking
And
reproducing,
Waiting for
it all to manifest
In some
medical emergency
Robbing
them of breath
Their only
god given right.
These are
the people,
Who clean
toilets, tend tills
Stack boxes
in warehouses
Serve bad
beer
In bad pubs
to afternoon boozers
With 40 a
day coughs
Yellow
fingers and B&H perfume,
Who dream
of lottery wins
So they can
buy the things
They think
Beyonce does,
Watch news
for celebrity gossip
So they can
bitch on a c-lister
One reality
show above them
On a ladder
leant against
Bourgeoise
wall where
Wit and
will will not overcome.
These are
the people,
And I recognize them,
But no
longer know them.
These are
the people
For whom
subservience,
Hegemony,
poverty and deference
Are the
price they pay
To Eton’s
old boy mafia.
These are
the silent majority,
Who laugh
and swear and gossip
About TV
shows
Cus any
dream will do
When
reality is a foe.
What Use Is Verse?
What use is
verse
in this old
world
of pain and
misery.
How can a
simple,
subtle line
decipher or
define
a world
that’s torn,
like flesh ripped
by a roses
thorn.
How can I
compare thee
to a
summer’s day,
when the
sun shies away
behind
angry skies,
while the
only clouds that float
o’er this
old town
clap with
thunder
and pour
with venom.
What use
are pretty,
delicate
words
to ears more
used
to swears
and moans.
They care
not
for this
blood red rose,
which pouts
like
swollen
lover’s lips,
whose kiss draws
sweat
from ashen
skin.
Oh Lord,
please tell me,
what use is
verse
on a
day like
this….?
Bartender,
just one more (Leonard Cohn lovesong for the road)
You whisper
to me,
so the
bartender can’t hear,
"I can
feel
the bare
bones of love
rattling through
the ancient catacombs
of my
soul,"
but you
know
as well as
I do
that
holding out,
with all
your might,
for a
teenage feeling
you’ve no
right
to believe
in,
will only
drain
the colour
from your face
faster than
you suck at
that glass in your hand.
You sigh,
and look to the floor,
and jam
your hand
in your
pocket
and cry to
the bartender:
"One
more!
just one
more for the road,
and change
the jukebox
to a
Leonard Cohen love song."
Rather excellent, at the very least...
ReplyDeleteRather excellent, at the very least...
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