Monday, November 17, 2014

Memoria ex a Poeta


Looking out over the green acres
The water spouts washing the nameplates
And feeding the verdant pasture
The tree line the road giving little shade to the grave stones
This cemetery the last resting place of so many
Bred to feed the machine, the bureaucratic factory
Keeping the wheels of a dying industrial age alive
There will be one person buried in the hole, dug during a rainstorm
Reserved for a chef of words
A poet.
Lost in a corner beneath a dying rose bush
The name almost eroded away on the green colored brass plate
But his words, thoughts and ideas live on
In the self published anthology
Now sold in a used bookstore
To be bought, read and misunderstood
By a woman who devours poetry like an elephant consumes fruit
Tossed on a pile of other books like a dirty pair of her ex-husband underpants
The words saved by her fluffy white poodle pitbull mix
Who after being shouted at grabs the book in his mouth and runs into the street
Poetry always needs a good home and Andre a student of literature picks it up
From where it was deposited next to the dog’s favorite lamppost
Opened regularly and read aloud, the poet’s works is heard by all who are present
A new generation listen to the words of a long ago dead unknown poet.








Great Malvern


It was middle earth
A town beneath the hills
Once famous for its curing water and enigma persona
Sitting on the north flank to view
The valley spread like a Victorian tablecloth
The wind from the north smelling of hops
Ready to be picked for the local brew
The town awakes amongst the clouds of rain
Damp and dismal making the painter see shades of grey
Above the music shop in St. Celica Hall
The piano turner pucks at an old baby grand
Once long ago the composer so pomp and circumspect
Composed grand music in his garden shed called London
While old ladies gathered in the Blue Bird tea room
For morning coffee and local gossip
The public school children in uniforms strict
Raced from college to St. Ann’s Well
There to meet a suitor
A future lord or lady of this aristocratic land
Memories of wartime excellence
Of a college electronic viewed by radar
Lady Windermere fans her face
At the theatre where Shaw and Shakespeare regularly played
But it was the music floating high above the hills
That makes this town, its hills, its people my early life

Life without parole


I am but a prisoner in misery
Pain within and pain without
A struggle to defend my fragile body
To fight that which is unseen deep beneath my skin
No one heard the cries of violence taking place
If there was someone to listen to the tears falling on my heart
I was a survivor and once again I am the victor
The blame lays by my side a dark and visible monster
I see in the nightmare of my day
There is no St George to fight my dragon
No magic patch to cure my ills
I am what I am, a prisoner trapped
Hanging by my own noose
Condemned by my wicked life, loveless and empty

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Cannon Folder Blues


My trembling lips speak of lies
Fostered in the ideology of extreme believers
Their hate-filled passion, the propaganda of the controlled media
The truth has no place
It is the fear they peddle, convincing the people that their lives are in danger
The fear that the rest of the world’s population will move in next door
Their religion, ideology imposed
The fear that an epidemic of a dangerous disease is just a handshake away
While they hike the price of essential drugs to cure
The fear that unless you vote for them you are doomed to poverty
Playing on your want of security of a job and home
Security that mind and body won’t be blown up by international or home grown terrorists
Security that our food, water and air hasn’t been contaminated
By fracking, pesticides or airplane spraying
Alas we are all cowards to stand up and fight this bureaucratic bullying
Our cowardice stops us from asking questions
Demanding answers
Revolution is not an option, complacency the natural order
As a government secret service agency will infiltrate the just cause
Bringing our human rights to an early grave
And those who blow the whistle a prison cell
Listening to our every conversation, reading our private emails
Even though we had deleted them
Tracking our research and selling our desires to their corporate pay masters
The battle never started, the war never begun
It's what we were born for
Slaves to the parasite ruled society