Monday 31 May 2010

Out of place.

Nothing
is ever
out of place
in Brighton:

a man
walks
down the road
wheeling
a wheelbarrow.

And?
What of it?

A man wears 
a t-shirt
which reads:
'ASBO Retards'.
He has a little girl.

And?
What of it?

Someone
wears 
sandals
and
rainbow
bell bottoms;

another
wears
all denim,
or all leather,
or all
indescript.

I walk around,
not feeling out of place,
but feeling
out of space - 
my own space;
adrift;
this space - closing in,
or closing down.

But it's not, really:
it's
just a case
of
new landlord:

it's all renewed,
all shuffled:
a new lick 
of paint:

same shit,
different government.

I enjoy my days
and wait for
the USA
to squash
another
innocent country.

Sunday 30 May 2010

Waiting.

Waiting,
waiting,
waiting,
with choice
on either shoulder;

head
like a boiled egg.

It's been a long-ish day:
clouds go astray,
Sun pours down
its
warm
little babies.

Hours left.
A film?
Music?
More words?

Choice.
Waiting.
Choosing to wait.
Waiting for choice.

Something's happening.
No, it's not.
Something's coming -
or has it been forgot?

Eyes wandering.
Jeans are hot.
Am I done with loving?
No, I'm not.

I love Jesus.

I love Jesus -
yes, I do.

I love Jesus -
more than you.

I love Jesus - 
yes: it's true
 
(because
I'm 
a
religious fraud).

New day (haiku).

I woke up today,
breath smelling like a soiled
arsehole - a new day.

Saturday 29 May 2010

Child.

I met a child of God
yesterday
and it had
the saddest eyes:

turned away
by its maker;
it seemed surprised.

I met a child 
of the universe
who sang with sounds -

sang with the joys
of life
she'd found.

I met a child
digging dirt,
just raking it up:

he was counting worms,
and measuring them
with his thumb.

I met a child with no parents -
just
a solitary carer

and she
was doing fine,
although she 
gave off
the saddest feeling.

I met a child
whom
her parents had 
labelled
as 'Christian',

but she didn't care:
she was playing on her own,
unaware
that she was
secretly
distancing herself
from the others.

I met a child
who met me with furrowed brows
at my every expression:

these weird habits of mine
were like
firecrackers
in its face

and I laughed for hours
afterwards
at the candidness
of young minds.

Category.

The moment
you put something
into a category,
it slips away
and dies
in featurelessness.

So don't do it.
Don't do it:
let them figure it out.

They might cast it into the fire,
but at least they'll have done it -
and at least it'll
really burn.

Heart.

You pour your heart out.
You know why?

Because
it's easier
to digest
in liquid form.

You pour it out
and they eat it up.

You pour it out,
and the rest bleed quietly.

You feel such utter madness -
every situation
can't be contained.
You want the best,
hope for the best,
but expect the worst.

It takes time -
you tell yourself
this
over
and over
and over
again

until it
has taken time.

Just keep pouring it out:
it seems to come in
endless supply,
and it doesn't 
hurt.

Legacy.

I want a legacy
(and I'm not
talking
an old computer).

I want a stack of
CDs,
LPs,
8-tracks,
that go
over the top of my head.

I want you to analyse
everything
I've done
for decades

(and still come away
feeling none the wiser).

I want happiness
to grow in my place -
I did try.
(What can I say?)

Forget flowers -
although my bones
will make good fertilser,
hopefully the other things I 
leave behind
will grow on their own

(with the aid of
eager ears,
clear eyes,
enquiring minds,
passive tongues,
fiery wits,
immense love).

If I....

If I were dying of cancer
would you hold me?
Cry with me?

Run with me?
Jump with me?
Laugh with me?

Losing all my hair,
laughing at the futility of it all,
still appreciating your smile;

I want to feel your touch.
I want to reach out to you -
because people rarely do.

Your lips aren't the goal;
nor is your heart, really.
I've nothing to win;
nothing to do:

I just want your attention,
your ears,
your affection;
your every affectation.

If I were dying of cancer,
my bones like bonemeal,
skin sallow like dead pig skin,
would you stroke my balding head?

Would you do that for me?
(And not condescend me?)
Would you sit with me
in a meadow of sunflowers
and daffodils
and just grow in the sunshine?

And what if I
didn't have cancer -
would you
do that for me,
too?

Silent.


When people are silent
the crazy become crazier,
the loud become louder,
the mean become meaner,
the confused become more confused;

thoughts become tangled,
the isolated lose their way,
chickens start chewing hay,
someone breaks in two:
I feel the same as you.

When people are silent
we lose common ground,
the found turn unfound,
the dead rise,
the living die;

the demons stir,
the birds fall out of the sky,
the clouds
come 
down
from great heights
to rest on our shoulders
and drive us into our holes.

So why don't you tell me how you feel?
You're not the only one, surely.
When you speak your thoughts
the world listens
(you are perfect).

Slow down.

Slow down.
Do you even know where you are?

I need to get this done;
I don't know why.

It's just on, and on, and on:
a hammer against a wall.
It never stops:
it never will.

I used to feel love.
Now I don't feel love at all.
It's all a rush:
I don't know where I am.

Targets, deadlines,
home again:
music, dinner,
calm,
silence,
loneliness,

furnishings,
organisation;
the cat's
dinner.

I saw you at
the bus stop
the other day
and I couldn't help
but smile:

you were smiling to yourself
and I felt
like bursting inside.

You have no idea
how beautiful you are
and how much
I want to preserve
this feeling.

But it goes;
it all goes

(and I want it
to all go
to you.) 

One day.

I fell in love with a feeling that 
I haven't courted for so long. 
It feels good to have it back, 
and be under its spell. 

I'll see you when the Moon is a friend, 
and the sky welcomes all your enquiries. 

The sky is streaked with cirrus clouds 
that 
seem to be 
drawn 
to the Moon, 
and others come in splotches. 

Wherever you go, I'll always be there: 
the breeze that stirs your skin; 
something quiet within - 
a voice that you console when
all
is upon you. 

One day, you'll be free. 
One day, you'll be. 
One day....

Thursday 27 May 2010

We manage you, so you don't have to.

Look over there
(is that a hand
in your pocket?)

Look over there
(is that a hand
in your pocket?)

We will do
what we
want
any time.

Is that a crime?

You elected us.
Is that a crime?

Uh-oh!
Uh-oh!
Here's a distraction.
Don't you all
want
a piece
of the action?

That's what you told me.
(That's what I told
you to say.)

Jump when I say.
Freeze when I say.
You'll get what you want
and we'll vent your voice

to certain forums,
and you'll
all
be living
with such decorum;

all alone
in quiet rooms,
blue
with glare:

we'll be there
in the corner: 
a pair of eyes;

it's no surprise -
you put us there.

Is that a hand in your pocket?
Do you think
your Constitution
will stop it?

We'll get what we want
any time.

The Supreme Court
put us here
(is that a crime?)

Yes:
but you'll
never know.

You
will 
fall
through 
holes
in the system.

Tuesday 18 May 2010

Friend.

If you like
I could be
the heterosexual equivalent
of a gay friend -

we could share things
and talk;
only
I'd secretly
admire your breasts
and lust
after your bare shoulders.

(This is 
the most joyous
I've felt
in a few weeks.)

Smile.

Recently,
an old man
passed away

not knowing
that this side
is the better.

Maybe this is heaven;
maybe this is hell;
maybe this is nowhere at all -
that's just well.

With
the little time
I have left
I'm gonna have
some fucking fun.

Tuesday 11 May 2010

Plastic surgery.

Underneath your plastic veneer
you're still an ugly cunt:
I wouldn't touch you
even if I had the syph.

Your nose is perfect
and your teeth are white
and your breasts are taut
and your stomach is flat;

but your soul is alien
and your arsehole 
is still
slut country.

Ugly people
masquerading
as lookers
are
despicable creatures

and I think I had sex
with a couple of them
the other night.

Advertising.

Try this:
you don't need it;
but we need you.

You really want it,
don't you?
You really do.
If you're
not holding
some tacky shit,
don't you
just feel blue?

Try it on for size
and lose all sense
of who you are
or what your past meant
or where your life is heading
or just where it is
you've been;

fill your life with garbage -
sleep
in this
plastic dream.

Go celebrate
with your girlfriends:
go buy some new confection;

go shave your legs
or apply some cream -
go
flex
your predilection.

The Earth is all for you;
don't you see?
Go claim it all right now.

I wish you'd
jump
into the sea.

(That
sure would
make the world
lighter.)

Monday 10 May 2010

A poem for the poor.

Give me
your poor,
your needy,
your tired,
and your windblown,

and I will
ignore them

and
put them 
in the ground.

(If you think
ghettos are bad,
you ought to see
what happened
to the Natives.)

Nice.

It's nice
to get away
for five minutes
just
to look
at the clouds:

they're so
airy
and 
they don't judge
or
ask for any favours.

Looking at them,
you realise
you've just got to
push on
and stop
making bones
where there's 
only flesh.

As you sit there
you realise
the point
you wanted to convey
has slipped away;

so you
just
sit there.

(But
then
a siren
causes you to stir:
you look at the birds
and see
that you'd
better start heading back.)

The last generation.

I'd
like to be
a poet
who goes
to wine parties
and soirees

to sup
champagne,
mingle
with authors,
and eat
caviar;

but I know
I'll never
meet Johnny Carson
or kiss
Capote's feet:

I am
of
the last generation

and I'll
probably
end up
dead
in a ditch
before
I've even made it
half-way through.

Sentimental.

I met
a homeless man
today:

he had
a small
alsatian dog
called 'Petit Fleur';

I'm feeling
sentimental
and don't
want to
state his name

(although
I don't have
anything bad
to say about him).

He wore
a wicker hat:
fresh
and cheap
fibres -

like a copy
of some
Native American
tourist piece.

His name
is Clive:
he was
friendly
and enquiring

and
hope
to see him again.

Beer bottle

I found a
discarded beer bottle
this morning:

the fucker
probably
necked it in one
and left it

for some
poor nobody
to pick up -

some
poor nobody
who deserves
to be in his place.

Sunday 9 May 2010

Supervisor.

Every time
my supervisor
would watch me

I would
do 
something
stupid,

like throw a box
hard
on the ground

or say something
that would
get me
in deep trouble:

I'd call
someone
an arsehole

or 
throw
a fucking
sulk.

'I'm sorry,'
I'd say,
'but it
comes
with
the job description'.

Change.

You can't 
change the world:
you can't even change
the times;

you can barely change
any minds
and it's even hard
to change oneself

(but it's
okay to try).

Saturday 8 May 2010

Sad.

Sometimes,
I think I'm sad
but 
then I realise
that
the saddest thing

is that 
I'm not sadder
than
everyone else:

even in 
my most
self-assured
moments,

I know
that
my heart
is true

and that,
every second,
I bleed
without ever dying.

Art (#2).

I punched
my woman
in the face
'cause I thought
it was art;

I slit my wrists
and wiped
my blood
all over town
'cause it seemed
fun
to live on the edge -

the edge
of the blade,
at least.

I made
a fool
of myself
and fucked with
everyone's heads.

It
got me
nowhere

but I 
sure as Hell
had a good time

(although
I ended up
going to bed
lonely
but drunk).

Blend.

I was
so tired
earlier

that I
almost
invented
a new blend:

'hush'

(I didn't know
whether
I was
in
a hurry
or a rush).

But I sure
was
God-damn
tired.

(Sometimes
people have
moments
that make them
think
they should just
step out
into the road!)

Gay Pride.

Flags
and banners,
and flowers,
and pretty,
pink arseholes,

in warm,
August air,

parading
around
the streets
of Brighton.

There's
nothing
to be proud of
with regard
to being gay -

it's not a skill,
or an accolade,
or something
more desirable
than being straight,
or bi,
or pansexual
(or even a chaste):

I think
they should
re-brand it
'Gay Happiness Day';

that way,
I'd feel
more inclined
to join 
in the celebrations.

The plight of blacks.

Lincoln
and H. G. Wells
were racists
and bigots

and Thomas Jefferson
held slaves.

Working conditions
under slavery
were actually
better
than 
under employment
up north:

better pay,
fairer treatment,
better
living quarters -
most
liberated blacks
actually 
stayed behind

(I'm not
advocating
slavery -
every man
has the right
to be 
treated
like
an expendable end).

Only certain
people 
would
employ
the niggers;
and their
pay
was paltry;

they couldn't argue:
'twas either
work
or starvation.

You 
think
it ended
with
Civil Rights?

My friend,
you
don't 
even
know
the half of it.

(None of us
is a slave
to any man
any longer,
but we all
remain
slaves
to the wage.)

“I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in anyway the social and political equality of the white and black races – that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race. I say upon this occasion I do not perceive that because the white man is to have the superior position the negro should be denied everything” - Abraham Lincoln.

Friday 7 May 2010

Grandma.

Just before you
croaked,
you gurgled:

eyes wide,
with whites
white
and pupils tight

you looked like
something
out of this world:

a ghost
experiencing
itself.

Your face was contorted,
and your stomach was distended,
and your legs were puffy
like something
unsavoury -
I feel dispeptic
just recollecting it.

When you passed,
I held
my father
and pointed at the clouds.

'Look, dad,
it's her up there: 
can you see her?'

From 
that moment on
I knew
I'd 
never
see you again.