Gas, for gaslighting
Grilled world seconds from midnight
Eichmann in Houston
Short sighted pollution
Turkeys vote from one night of maddness
Before they ring in Christmas
Liquidate the forest, desecrate empty cradles
Civilisations and small business fail
When they don't price time.
Saturday, October 13, 2018
Thursday, October 11, 2018
Poison Ivy
The fascist apologists tend to come from the middle
Strivers, connivers, the safe
Those at the top are oft for the chop
Those at the bottom can see what is rotten
The conformist, uniformists that hate
They agree to the fiddle
Facist apologists tend to come from the middle.
Strivers, connivers, the safe
Those at the top are oft for the chop
Those at the bottom can see what is rotten
The conformist, uniformists that hate
They agree to the fiddle
Facist apologists tend to come from the middle.
Monday, September 24, 2018
Romantic advice
If he asked me, I'd say reoffend
For this love would not leave
And even if she's not that fond
Of you, in faith believe
This love would not leave.
In all sympathy abandon
To forsook incarceration
This is not how love is done
In any situation.
So there may be some frustration.
A love to set you free of course
Cannot leave you locked
To be the cause of such remorse
Is not the conduct of a rock
So go back to the dock.
Shoplift, or insurance fraud
Or barring that a fight
Such priceless love man can't afford
To let away in flight
For every sleepless night.
So reoffend my friend
The surest way to keep her
Give all the water in the Thames
For rare sips from that beaker
And absence make love deeper.
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
As she passes
Softly goes my sweet
In notes like snowdrops
A symphony of whispers
And gentle as a rose.
Thursday, August 30, 2018
Pills
If you feel unwell
There's a pill.
And if that makes you unwell
There's a pill for the pill
And should you find yourself still unwell
Well there's a pill for the pill for the pill
Till your killed.
And if you should wonder why you never got well
Well, where there's a pill there's a bill.
There's a pill.
And if that makes you unwell
There's a pill for the pill
And should you find yourself still unwell
Well there's a pill for the pill for the pill
Till your killed.
And if you should wonder why you never got well
Well, where there's a pill there's a bill.
Friday, August 24, 2018
And other mistakes
Some I pushed away
Some I just let go.
Uncertain on a foreign street
Amber catching the beach highlights
Awed my virginal eyes
After years, the airport, when you
cried
A phone call over oceans
When I said there was no one else to turn
to
And cried.
The grey air in that manhandled flat
Grills on the windows
When you returned
Charged the air like coming thunder and
said
“He said don't cheat on me”
The door, an invisible valve
The candles you lit, if I stayed
Till they dripped together into their
plates and shook
So wise, gentlemanly, I thought
To leave unknowing for the next party's entanglement
And revenge, caught in somebody else's war
And revenge, caught in somebody else's war
The door was like a valve. I recall
A mind full of abstracts, taught
ideals,
That lacked a sherpa's barefoot intimacy
That lacked a sherpa's barefoot intimacy
With the undulating track, details
Each hillock, stone and rock, how imperfect we all are.
Each hillock, stone and rock, how imperfect we all are.
The wintered Hackney streets
Through greyed snow, when spring was
within
And concrete felt like rubber
underfoot.
Some I just let go.
Monday, August 13, 2018
Picnic short of a muse - Things not to say on tinder 86
If you're a sandwich short of a picnic
Then I'm a picnic short of a muse
Fruity, cheesy with some breadsticks
I've got something you might use
We'll go country, find a hayrick
Pass the offy get some booze
If you're a sandwich short of a picnic
I'm a picnic short of a muse.
Then I'm a picnic short of a muse
Fruity, cheesy with some breadsticks
I've got something you might use
We'll go country, find a hayrick
Pass the offy get some booze
If you're a sandwich short of a picnic
I'm a picnic short of a muse.
Saturday, August 11, 2018
Blueprint - Ghosts
Those that pass through walls, the
halls, courts unseen
That raise the terrified from their
sleep
The rustling papers, the forms of dead
In screens, smiling, seductive, that
lurk
The fridge, dark shadows, the laundry machine
That haunt the story high fonts of our
streets.
Do you dress in my mind of them?
Do you believe in them?
Ghosts.
Do you wake, dress and wash at ghost's
behest
You, of solid flesh, by
borders bound
And steel word of law. They pass
through walls.
Your desk they pace and press the circled clock
Between your blades, to find a spine
Pushing honey up the twine,
String lines to marionettes.
Putting money in your pocket.
Do you buy old rope from ghosts?
Do you sacrifice
The pennies, hours, sensibilities and
principal
For the invisible
Look your brother in the eye and lie
Steal, turn people from the door
Over to the law for the undead unseen
For the rustling papers
Would you operate ovens
For ghosts?
Crates and paper travel like the
poltergeists are puppeteers
The chill hand inhuman
A morality of Gyges, picking the
pumphouse lock
Come by, and whistles. The crook.
The dead with unfinished business
Some functionary faked the paper for a
cheque
Fiddled while the world burnt. Banal
concerns.
The furniture is gone, the railroad and
pipes
The miracles of yestyear's endeavour
In flames devoured. They gather
In a semi-circle and rub their hands
Stretch their formless palms towards
the flames
Solid flesh blisters, yet ghosts cannot
get warm.
Uniformed armies at their beck
Daily ford the river, daily scale walls
Battle blind and raging at their foe
Soldiers cannot see the war
Yet blood let, pillage and enfief their fellow ape
The corn we tend, the nightingale. What if from far, far off
With a bottle top taken as a token to a
wraith
You choked the albatross.
Do you believe in ghosts?
Sunday, August 05, 2018
The belief in fear
Listen, casually. Believe what you hear
And you will be made very, very, afraid
What was it last sent a love to the grave?
Terrorism is the belief in fear.
Life's a short surf on this thunderous wave
A wet board under foot all in balance
Accidents, incidents, timing and chance
And what was it last sent a love to the grave?
There's a war on, and foreign invaders
Blast bombs everyday,
but not over here
Terrorism is the belief in fear
We're worried yes, that's how they made us.
Painting a picture on bright coloured screens
Truth's got shoes, there's fibre optics for hoax
They'll teach you hate like they taught you to smoke
A hollowed out husk in the spider's machine.
Do you wear raincoats when the weather is clear
Need protection, rally round and obey
What was it last sent a love to the grave?
Terrorism is the belief in fear.
II
They've mapped new Asian pipelines on a plan
Because they fell in love with LPG;
And Russia's gas transmission monopoly
So, well, they taught us to hate all Islam.
Two men stabbed a soldier in Woolwich and stood
They were nicked, arrested and sectioned
Flew a kid back from Libya,
to Manchester
in the election
A Home Office assett, he ended up dead.
And you will be made very, very, afraid
What was it last sent a love to the grave?
Terrorism is the belief in fear.
Life's a short surf on this thunderous wave
A wet board under foot all in balance
Accidents, incidents, timing and chance
And what was it last sent a love to the grave?
There's a war on, and foreign invaders
Blast bombs everyday,
but not over here
Terrorism is the belief in fear
We're worried yes, that's how they made us.
Painting a picture on bright coloured screens
Truth's got shoes, there's fibre optics for hoax
They'll teach you hate like they taught you to smoke
A hollowed out husk in the spider's machine.
Do you wear raincoats when the weather is clear
Need protection, rally round and obey
What was it last sent a love to the grave?
Terrorism is the belief in fear.
II
They've mapped new Asian pipelines on a plan
Because they fell in love with LPG;
And Russia's gas transmission monopoly
So, well, they taught us to hate all Islam.
Two men stabbed a soldier in Woolwich and stood
They were nicked, arrested and sectioned
Flew a kid back from Libya,
to Manchester
in the election
A Home Office assett, he ended up dead.
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Shapes
These loves of different shapes
They do not always tessellate
Naturally slip to fit, embraced
Like fate cast each for other's sake.
In an instant stick, attach
Some may not stretch, to depth
To fill that hole, some gap
Or knot that stops the closest breath.
But oh, those fine balancing acts
Dynamic, each in flux and pivot
Like champagne, upon a plaque
Upon a hand, upon a ship.
With time some loves may mould
Flow to sediment depressions
May shave or carve, swell to holes
May grow
We never sat that lesson.
May grow
We never sat that lesson.
And you, you loved me
Like I was a leak in the gutter over
your pot
And I, like you were a lost
Lego technic toy from the attic.
But the shapes didn't fit.
I knew it. Did you
Did you make that mistake?
The shapes don't always tessellate.
Saturday, July 21, 2018
Field of Hay
This field of hay
Is featureless
The sun lost
In late day haze
Cans and empties
Which way is home?
Is it fair to ask
The field is featureless.
Is featureless
The sun lost
In late day haze
Cans and empties
Which way is home?
Is it fair to ask
The field is featureless.
Friday, July 20, 2018
White satin
Seraphim, guardian of hope
Culmination of nature's art
Jet flame high, remote
Open up, let flow you heart
Your lips
Close enough for blood to bind
All before, pay no mind
Other lovers, yours and mine
Pay no mind
Gossip and judging eyes
Pay no mind
For what judge
Are eyes of souls and love?
For what judge
Are eyes of souls and love?
Call, tell me are your hands empty
Holding soap bubbles
And where do you remember me?
Do you pinch yourself sometimes
Troubled that I can't be true.
Those actors that you know
Could they dig this deep?
Could you?
Sunday, July 15, 2018
To the editor
To the editor
I often write poetry
Do you read haiku?
I often write poetry
Do you read haiku?
Trying for Sticky Toffee
They promised sweets of our
heritage
If it's too hard
And pink cheeked childhood
Cooking sticky toffee
It's not looking good.
That sweet sticky toffee
That you chew and chew and chew
Till you're sick
Seems simple enough
But it's a delicate trick.
But it's a delicate trick.
If it's too hard
We'll break our teeth in a bite.
If it's too soft
We'll swallow all overnight.
Stir butter and sugar
But the heat's hard to judge
I've always preferred the imported
chocolate
A British tradition,
A British tradition,
They'll serve us a fudge.
(Diabetes is the only outcome of this
shower
There's a mountain of butter, start
over
The pan's a hard scour.)
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Shrapnel no.7
Black coffee and acid for breakfast.
Tai Chi.
False spring starts me like a childhood memory.
You should stay one day
For coffee.
We could discover a whole new city.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Thing 2
Haul upon these mooring lines
Till separate gravities meld
He told me hard across formica tables
And I laughed
So far from Delphi
How would it be different.
The harlequin and bells
Against pavement teeth, stacked dice
With lights on on some floor
Adequate camouflage
Concrete, at least temporarily.
They changed hands
The cafe that made the churros
Watered down the chowder
And soon there will be funerals
Crush buckets like pallbearers
Pause.
Traditions, like guards
Will change
Like water through a lock
So soon forgot we'll say here's level
Even if it's the 27th floor
And they still call the children
African
Eating bacon, stale churros
And shaking shrapnel at their elders
To buy beer.
Thursday, June 28, 2018
I cried the whole night through
You did not come
I cried the whole night through
Such that my soaked mattress
Became a marsh
Sinking in the thought of you
Submerged and all surrounding
Body riven through with flame in
drowning
In the brackish, black undertow
Like a hot wash spinning
Sweat drops on my spine
Mustard tears on my cheeks
The thought of you sawing
On my stretched gut string.
You did not come
I cried the whole night through
Such that my soaked mattress
Became a marsh and I awoke
Surrounded by wading birds and heron.
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Crisp Packets on the Avenell Rd and A letter to Arsene Wenger II
Under the clouding Sky.
What once was diamond, marble, bronze
Is plastic now, light and glass
Astroturf
Where was once was grass.
Hashtag protests staffed by ghosts
Journalists and empty crisp
Packets blowing down the Avenell Rd.
Felt-tip scrawl on A4
Out of all proportions lensed
Broadcast reproduction
Global distribution, trends
It's Freudian. The trapped at home
And fatherless grasp manhood
Through patricide. With Oedipal leverage
An edited double page spread
An edited double page spread
By buttered bread mercenaries
Goes blowing down the Avenell Rd.
Under the clouding sky.
Lesbian bloggers on the Avenell Rd.
Crisp packets in Damascus
The tactics of birth certificates
A war of pipes, fox holes and pockets
Non-linear dynamics, google mapped
OCEANs, fingertip cracks
Fissure outliers in the system
Literate multi-lingual sophistication
Went out of fashion.
And enlightenment so yesterday.
II. A letter to Arsene Wenger
A guess the cock if oft the weather
vein
A shot at the big cup covers a couple
Of crying actors, tickets and
twitter-bots
Same shit. I blame brexit.
After the game is done
Blinded by the Sun
They'll blame some crazy bastard from
the A-team
Claim he didn't work his share.
After the game is done
In light of the sky and the sun
If we look around for those to whom comparison seems fair
What colour was your
revolution?
Beyond Michels and Paisley
Beyond Michels and Paisley
Like none since Ali
Alongside Gaddaffi, Assad, dare I say
Obama
A leader worthy of hyper reality psychodrama.
Transcendent in the end
As Kings are ever known as Cesar
The Gunners head will be Arsene.
Saturday, June 09, 2018
Not for the rhyme
It ain't poetry that makes them fly from overseas
Swear they won't leave
Long after three
Holding cold cups of tea.
It ain't the rhyme
That makes them bang on the door
Call at the window
Wanting what came before.
I can't put my finger on it
It's on the tip of my tongue
It's not for the rhyme that they come.
Swear they won't leave
Long after three
Holding cold cups of tea.
It ain't the rhyme
That makes them bang on the door
Call at the window
Wanting what came before.
I can't put my finger on it
It's on the tip of my tongue
It's not for the rhyme that they come.
Friday, June 08, 2018
Fish and refugees I,II,III
The bald heads bobbed above the standard seats
Like toffee apples in a bowl on Halloween
“I'm shipping the chest freezer all the way over”
“All the way over!”
“All the way over. Shipping's cheap.”
“I was a child in the Isle of Mann
It's their fault for having open borders
All the way to over there.”
“I know about the EU” he said
“We have an agreement with the French”
37,000ft in the air.
“Do you know how many people died on Thailand's roads this month?”
He asked, almost accusatory.
“How old is yours?”
“36”
“You don't smoke”
“No”
“No”
“Not anymore”
“And how old are you now?”
“We can have the fish”
“You can't just fish more fish there are scientists”
“Scientists give our fish to the Spanish.”
Fish is 0.5% of GDP
97% of migrants are not refugees
This I didn't share, lean in, intervene
From my chair, given that obviously,
Small changes can cause chaos
This I didn't share, lean in, intervene
From my chair, given that obviously,
Small changes can cause chaos
In a complex system
And at the time we were all 37,000ft in the air.
“I haven't done as well as some of my friends
From the Grammar. Secondary Modern?”
The other nods
And I don't blame my father” to strangers
37,000ft in the air
With no mention of the City, or pensions, tax
Empire, sunset havens, their asylum.
With no mention of the City, or pensions, tax
Empire, sunset havens, their asylum.
“but you want to know what went wrong of course”
The man from the Isle of Mann agreed.
And they talked fish and refugees.
II.
The myths don't tell you
That we dismantled the cotton industry of India
For the mills of Manchester
II.
Because the commonwealth will come and help us
Because we were raised on these myths
That Johnny Foreigner loved the way we give it to em
Because coal black, white tooth sambo
Will offer up his bowl
In exchange for a touch of British class.
Because they were lucky to have us
We were raised on these myths.
What have they done to Greece?
What have they done to Greece?
To Sumeria?
Ruins now and aped in architecture
The house that power built and myths
Stripped and shipped and worn
Like ermines of our time.
Do they build like Christchurch in Korea?
Will we who first burnt coal be remembered in our forms
Will they read Shakespeare and Newton any more
Like Pythagoras and Homer
Will these stories fur our descendants shoulders
Even as their great arc breaks on this new era's shore?
The myths don't tell you
That we dismantled the cotton industry of India
For the mills of Manchester
Dismembered the Ottoman Umma when oil was new and cool.
Fought the Chinese for right to sell them smack
Fought them again to sell them more.
Murdered the Irish for nine hundred years,
Fought the Chinese for right to sell them smack
Fought them again to sell them more.
Murdered the Irish for nine hundred years,
James, Henry, Cromwell, the blight,
Filler on the Western Front.
Armed Benin to enslave the Gold Coast, Guinea
Then broke them in debt
Armed Benin to enslave the Gold Coast, Guinea
Then broke them in debt
Our myths don't record this
But the Irish, Chinese, Ghanaians, the Indians
But the Irish, Chinese, Ghanaians, the Indians
They all have their own myths.
Our myths speak of a heroic past
Our myths speak of a heroic past
When pith helmets paved the way for God
And God spoke in English
When we bought trade to backwaters
And illiterates ululated, encircled, enthralled
Crowned us with garlands and feathers
Showed us gleaming treasures which we took.
Showed us gleaming treasures which we took.
Our myths never say that maybe they
Expected garlands back.
And so we go
Cap proudly on our head
Expected garlands back.
And so we go
Cap proudly on our head
And offer up these myths to the French
Who we fought for five hundred years
And sneered at.
And Germans, who we fought and humiliated
Who we fought for five hundred years
And sneered at.
And Germans, who we fought and humiliated
The Italians who we fought, the Austrians and Hungarians
Who we defeated. The Dutch for whom we invented
Concentration camps.
And the Spanish where we've got a rock
Concentration camps.
And the Spanish where we've got a rock
Stuck like a pile in their butt
And say give us this, for these myths
But they have their own.
III.
III.
The driver made the ride scream all the way
Down the road from Bangkok, professional
Past low foundries, platoons of effigies
Blurring like change, green and sweat, square shacks
Body shops each block like the vehicles here
Are broken.
The green Island rises above grey sea
Like a well sung myth. Roof gone high and wide
Above the shrubs, pale sand, dark palm fronds splay
Like torn Venetian blinds against the sky
Pennants of a paradisal army
And some, beetle eaten their headdress slipped
Make littoral a harbour of stalled ships
The tropic thick air presses like a dilute sea
Seasoned by butterflies, blooms, these foreign
To my eye the lizards, bugs, the plants here
Flower until they die.
From the shore at night you'd be forgiven
For thinking the fishing boats far cities
Lost Atlantis and its suburbs risen
From the sea. What chance do squid have, what pity
Soft flourescence the most delightful spell
Of all sweet dances in staged Darwin's hall
What chance do they stand against the blazing lure
Appolline, Venusian halogens
To see such beauty so immense and pure
That we could not know, but to call it awe
So they rush to the net, the plate, their end.
There are young teak stands, seas of cane acreage
And the jungle brush fires reak like temples.
Throughout the year, when the cane stands tall
After sundown men go from the village
Set flaming torches to ripe sugar
And it lights the countryside like pillage.
The saddest part is to see elephants
Balding pink patches, hunched, dropped ears, limp trunks
Chained waiting for riders they cannot want
Far from home jungles and most often drunk.
A couple, young and bronzed track the water
Footprints snakewise though the sand and jetsam
Their hands are not together, heads are down
This dream they both dreamt in another town
Seems dreamt now in separate minds today
Like they woke in a brochure and full of reproach
The saltwater washes their tracks away.
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