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Victorian Values by Simon R Gladdish
VICTORIAN VALUES
BY
SIMON R GLADDISH
INTRODUCTION
‘Victorian Values’, Simon R Gladdish’s first poetry collection was mostly written in Marbella, Spain. In tone, the poems range from humour to cynicism to naked unashamed romanticism. When it was finished, his wife Rusty pointed out that several of the poems in the volume had a Victorian flavour so he decided to entitle it ‘Victorian Values’ in homage to Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Browning, Rossetti, Shelley and Keats.
DEDICATION
For my much-missed mother Enid and my father Kenneth (fellow author), my brother Matthew and his family, my sister Sarah and her family and last but never least, my wife Rusty, without whom there would have been nothing.
BIOGRAPHY Simon R Gladdish was born in Kampala, Uganda in 1957. His family returned to Britain in 1961, to Reading where he grew up. Educated at Oxford and Cambridge Universities, he trained as an English Language Teacher, a profession which enabled him to live for years in Spain, Turkey, Tunisia and Kuwait. He now lives near Swansea, Wales. His poetry has been warmly acclaimed by other poets including Andrew Motion, the present British Poet Laureate who wrote to say ‘I really enjoyed the energy of your poems.’ (Despite this ringing recommendation, perhaps it is worth pointing out that the British Poetry Establishment has rejected every single poem that I have ever sent them and despite receiving thousands upon thousands of hits on this and other sites, to this very day I am STILL being ostracised by the British Poetry Establishment.) He has self-published eight volumes of poetry so far: Victorian Values, Back to Basics, Images of Istanbul, Seasonal Affective Disorder, Original Cliches, Torn Tickets and Routine Returns and The Tiny Hunchbacked Horse and The Poisoned Tunic jointly translated from Russian with Vladimir and Elena Grounine. (Because the British Poetry Establishment is such a cess-pit of cronyism I am still looking for a publisher for my poetry and would welcome any serious offers.)
MOSQUITO
Look, I’m a generous host but You’ve been helping yourself to Bloody Marys All night long without my permission. I know because when I woke up this morning I was itching without intermission.
What kind of a house guest are you? You’re rude and impolite. You take without giving anything in return And then take flight.
I’m growing tired of your softly, softly approach And the sycophantic way you whine in my ear. Frankly, your stiletto caresses are bloody painful And my initial indulgence has given way to fear.
From now on there’s going to be a different regime; You’ll have to sign the visitor’s book in red ink. And unless I’m feeling unusually hospitable, You’ll pay with your life for the next furtive drink!
LOVE SONG
How can mere words express The tenderness I carry in my heart for you? How can empty song convey The way I feel about you?
When cloudlets drift across the sky And rain descends in droplets; My thoughts to you do straightway fly, My muse to rhyming couplets.
And when th’unblinking eye of sun Makes us our coats to loosen, I know that you’re the only one I ever could have chosen.
Until we meet again my friend, Accept a fond farewell. The future, Like a ripening pearl Contains us in its shell.
BOREDOM
The afternoons are worst, I’m as taut as piano wire; Tormented by my thirst And trembling with desire For something good to happen, (A letter in the post?) But fate’s unyielding pattern Means the faintest hope is lost. ‘Abandon hope all ye who enter here!’ Runs the old familiar phobia; I speak not of the gates of Hell But a semi in suburbia. Healthwise I’m hale and hearty (Though shrunken by my labours) I think I’ll throw a party And invite my grumpy neighbours. I can’t be bothered to enthuse, I’m balanced on the brink; Please God provide me with some news Or an alcoholic drink!
AUTUMN GLORY
Why do I cherish the autumn? Why do I love it so much? Everything’s browning and hardy, Everything’s soft to the touch.
Clouds scud about in the heavens, Leaves swirl around in the air. Deciduous trees undress in the breeze While the sun snuggles closer to stare.
Birds silhouette in the branches, The colours have all become brighter. The puritanical pine looks perplexed And pulls his green anorak tighter.
I am hit by a wave of nostalgia; I wonder just where my youth went. I console myself with the knowledge That at least it was totally misspent.
I know why I so love the autumn; It awakes in me seas of reflection That crash upon a distant shore Of slumbering recollection.
SWAN SONG
Birds are the most privileged creatures; Proud owners of that for which we long. They possess the joy of flight And enjoy the gift of song.
They possess the joy of song And enjoy the gift of flight. While humans wallow in the dung, They soar towards the light.
When I meet my Maker (If I’m allowed a word) I’ll plead: ‘Lord, if I must return, Let it be as a bird.
On second thoughts, make me a man (If I may change my mind) I’d rather watch the graceful swan Than suffer humankind.'
WORDS
According to St John When all things began; The word dwelt with God And what God was, the word was. The pen is mightier than the sword For what is weightier than the word? Frankly, I believe that words are insubstantial; Their employment accidental, even circumstantial. (The motives of the phrasemakers are frequently financial.) Words are inky splotches which tremble on the page, A linguistic cage, a literary guage. But do they ever change the course of history? Do they feed the hungry or elevate the pygmy? Do they slake the thirsty or energize the weary? Do they cure the sick or turbo-charge the quick? The concentrated wisdom Of the world’s sublimest sage On the dusty stage of a bygone age Means rather less to most of us Than a living wage.
SUNSET
Sunset. A walk to the docks. The sun waves a leisurely goodbye Then slides behind the ridge. On the other side of the river A lighted inn. I search desperately for a bridge And eventually find one Miles along the quay. I cross and hurriedly retrace my steps. Inside, a lonely barman Craving company Greets me. I don’t much feel like talking So I turn away To the electronic Glass Bead Game And start feeding it gold nuggets. It must feel as sick as the gaudy parrot it resembles For it greedily gobbles everything And regurgitates nothing. The smirking barman grants me a weak watery smile And carries on polishing his glasses. It is I who wish to talk now But I’ve fluffed my chance. I sit and watch the sluggish river fail to flow And try to ignore the thin insistent voice Whispering in my ear: ‘You have been balanced on the wave And found slanting.’
SUBURBAN RHAPSODY
If there is a more melancholy scene Than a suburban park In mainland Britain On a wet Sunday afternoon When the grass looks like Gangrene And the sky is greyer Than the grimy slate On the grim rows Of surrounding terraces And groups of grubby children Are desultorily kicking around A muddy football Vainly trying to fill The cosmic time-warp Between dinner and tea Then I prefer not to know What it is. KEMPTON PARK
The autumn day loomed grand but grey As we ran towards the races. I clutched the form-card in my hand For the hurdles and the ‘chases.
Then I wrote a minor tragedy Upon a betting slip. I thought my equine hero Was perfect for the trip.
But when the race got underway He failed to do me proud. He stood upon his hinder legs And curtsied to the crowd.
After signing several autographs He sauntered down the track. He flattened the first hurdle And threw the monkey off his back.
He turned to bare his yellow teeth And wink his evil eye, As if to emphasise the fact He didn’t even try.
He wasn’t suited to a sport That celebrates the quick. The animals that I support Are elderly and sick.
He never had the breeding To justify his station. Now, like the boys at Eton I’ve had an expensive education.
I’ll have to see my banker To arrange another loan. May God bless all dumb animals, Especially this one!
I think I’ll found a society And devote all my free time To encouraging euthanasia For quadrupeds past their prime.
MONEY
They say that money talks And they’re right. It says: ‘I am everything and you are nothing. You fool. You didn’t think you’d Have me in your power for long. Did you? I am desirable, People dream about me every night. But I am slippery, Sparing with my favours. If I do decide to reward someone, I present myself by the sackful; Obscene quantities of me, Ridiculous amounts, Way in excess of what my chosen one Could ever spend or need. But I’m a bit sadistic too, When you’re as powerful as me, you can afford to be. If someone is starving, for example, I give them a teeny-weeny bit of myself. Not enough to help, of course, Just enough to jeer. As for you, When you’re huddled, shivering in your garret, Ransacking your drawers looking for me, I’ll be warmly ensconced in some thick, buckskin wallet. And when you’re tramping through the city streets, Searching for me in the gutter, I’ll be being massaged by some rich banker’s pudgy fingers. When you’re as sexy as I am, It’s almost impossible not to feel a touch superior. I know you long for me but I’m afraid it’s hopeless; Let’s just say that we inhabit two separate worlds.’
DEMOCRACY
We’ve had a Tory government For fifteen years or more Which struggles to reward the rich With proceeds from the poor.
Such selfless magnanimity Merits our support; Especially on election day When they’re a few votes short.
It’s not been all plain sailing though Despite the clear blue water; The community charge or poll tax Scuppered the grocer’s daughter.
They made up John, the cabin boy, (The acceptable face of greed) When he gets his politics O Level He’ll be very good indeed.
What’s this I see? A mutiny! They’ve made John walk the plank! The poor chap was totally out of his depth, He should never have left the bank.
VICTORIAN VALUES
We’re old, we’re poor, we’re sick, we’re sad. Who said life had to be this bad? We exist like ecclesiastical rats on our meagre money While the capitalist cats syphon milk and honey.
We’re not complaining we don’t get a sip. We’ll carry on feigning with stiff upper lip That we’re living in clover, our cup runneth over And we’re saving up hard for a day-trip to Dover.
‘Ah but you’re free’ the landlords say: ‘Free to starve and free to pay; Free to suffer and free to sicken, Free to feel your arteries thicken. If life is unfair, it isn’t our fault. Without inequality, where’s the salt? The rich toff in his castle, the pauper at his gate (Everyone must accept their station.) Wealth comes to all who are prepared to wait – We till we’re twenty-one and you for your next incarnation.’
HUMAN SALMON
I’ve been thrashing around Like a salmon in a shallow stream; The only truth I’ve found Is that living is a hollow dream. I’ve been drowning like a flailing fish Fighting for breath; My search for certainties unearthed Dragnets, hooks and death. The salmon gives birth Then turns up its fins. Humans pay a slower Price for their sins. As I survey graveyards Human and salmon; Extinct civilisations Egyptian and Roman; I wonder what it really means To be salmon or human And I have to confess That I don’t have a clue, man. We swim in schools of ignorance And sink beneath suggestions. We never know the answers Or even the questions.
EXISTENTIALISM
In the long run We are all dead. There’s a conundrum To ponder in bed.
For a short space of time We pace the earth’s crust. Then it’s ashes to ashes And dust to dust.
Compared with the cosmos We’re laughably small. The astonishing thing Is that we’re here at all.
Some, fearing extinction, Seek gods to anoint But making up idols Is missing the point.
Our deities mock us, Our nightmares torment us. That life is a farce Is the only consensus.
In the long run We are all dead: A puzzling conundrum To ponder in bed.
EXETER CATHEDRAL
Spread-eagled on the hillside Like a sphinx about to roar; Even among the heathen You inspire a certain awe.
Your cantilevered majesty Unveils the mason’s art. You are the city’s sanctuary, Its nucleus and heart.
The sandstone that composes you Is honey on the comb. When I step inside your portals, I feel that I’ve come home.
Contemporary architecture Makes comparisons seem cruel. Contrasted with our concrete blocks You are a precious jewel.
I’m glad that once there lived a race Of builders who believed. You stand as a memorial Of what can be achieved.
LOVERS
They never arrive together And leave nothing to chance. They sit at separate tables And deny romance.
Their cover would be perfect Were it not for the occasional glance, And the day I saw them in the cinema Holding hands.
DESTINY
My poverty precludes the prospect of a family, My skeleton shall be my soul remains; When I worked with Stanley at the factory, He warned ‘Don’t let your instincts rule your brains.’
I followed his instruction to the letter And waited for my lifestyle to improve; But waiting didn’t make things any better For money proved illusory as love.
Now I’m at the zenith of my years, Behind me little and before me less; I’m still a prey to phobias and fears, A pawn within a life-size game of chess.
It doesn’t matter what you think or do or say, You can’t escape the hammer blows of fate; Some dine on pheasant every other day, While others eye the contours of an empty plate.
Some settle down to sleep in satin sheets While others toss and turn on city streets. O favoured sons and daughters of Design, Which of you dares to swap your lot for mine? DREAMSCAPE
In the first part of the dream I was climbing a giant tree. I suppose I was expressing A longing to be free.
In the second part of the dream I was admiring a work of Renaissance art. The colours were magnificent Though the painting was still wet.
It was twice as long as it was broad And lying on the floor. It was like a Bronzino masterpiece With herald angels round the border.
Then I was in a medieval town, Inside a stranger’s house. I was trying to tidy up the lounge When distracted by my spouse.
Some friends of ours came visiting; Aged Donald and youthful Sonia. They spent the whole day making love Though they barely knew each other.
Eventually I took Donald home Because he wanted to travel to France. He needed some French currency And requested an advance.
The streets were narrow, cobbled and steep; The church had a twisted steeple. The locals seemed to consist of dwarfs And profoundly peculiar people.
It all got a bit too much for me So I dived into a tavern. I collided with the fruit machine And the jackpot descended like manna from Heaven.
I woke up shortly afterwards Rubbing my bleary eyes. If anyone can decode this dream, I’m prepared to offer a prize.
DEFINITIONS
Hooray for the middle classes! They’ve got off their well-padded arses And abolished Stupidity and starvation. Now when their kids are painfully thin Or can’t read or write We’re offered the explanation: ‘Matilda’s anorexic And poor old Matthew’s totally dyslexic.’
SEAN
My friend Sean’s a bugger. When I handed him a mug Of scalding tea (Handle towards me) He cursed and almost dropped it. ‘Too hot?’ I enquired. ‘What?’ he replied, ‘Nah, not enough sugar.’
MYOPIA
I thought I saw a grubby kid Rolling up our lino. I looked again and found it was The lid of our piano.
I thought I saw a daffodil Dancing on a chest. I looked again and found it was A compass pointing west.
I thought I saw a vast amount Of freshly minted money. I looked again and found it was A jar of mouldy honey.
I thought I saw a porcupine Asleep upon our chair. But when I looked a second time I found it wasn’t there.
I thought I saw an albatross Encircling my head. I looked again and found it was Exactly what I’ve said. UNIVERSITY
When I went away to college To amplify my knowledge I lived on bread and porridge For a whole long year.
The professor’s name was Skerrit, A man of very little merit Who used to keep a ferret In his underwear.
He said: ‘We offer anthropology With ancillary archaeology And molecular biology For the genetic engineer.
But what we really want are rowers, Javelin and discus throwers, Horn and trumpet blowers, Do you volunteer?
Come and see me after matin, We’ll translate a bit of Latin, Why your skin’s as smooth as satin – My dear.
Our proclivities aren’t fenian, American or Armenian, Although they have been called Athenian - Do I make my myself clear?
We’ve a cellar full of port, Wines of every different sort – Vintages which can’t be bought! Would you like a beer?
I can tell just from your greeting That you’re Winchester or Eton And your father is a mason – You need have no fear.
In the mornings you’ll read Kipling, In the afternoons go swimming. You won’t be bothered by young women – There aren’t any here.
POETIC LICENCE
Today I threw a song away Which cost a month of labour. Although I worked the thing like clay, ‘Twas not a work to savour.
I hope for fairer fate next time I have poetic session; The seamless match of rhythmic rhyme, Perfection of expression.
Some cite inspiration, others work; But I know the true reason. It basically comes down to luck, The mood, the muse, the season.
I think I’ll put aside my pen Before my thought grows coarser; And hand you on to greater men Like Tennyson and Chaucer. GREED
Is it the Rock Star’s destiny To be a billionaire? Is it ours to be sucked into A vortex of despair?
Is it the Film Star’s fortune To be as rich as teak? While others have to face the fact They won’t survive the week.
Is it the Supermodel’s beatitude That swells her bank account? It’s bound to change your attitude When you’re ‘earning’ that amount.
Let’s not forget the landowners Who don’t let you and me Set foot upon their huge estates Or enjoy the scenery.
I’m reminded of Boethius Whose words are true indeed: ‘Nature is satisfied with little But nothing satisfies greed.’
If these celestial superstars Gave something to the poor; Just think how many human beings Could have a little more.
The wheel of fortune used to turn With a reassuring click. A favoured few found wealth to burn, The rest of us felt sick.
Now inequality is so entrenched, Most cannot change their luck. I think that in the seventies The wretched wheel got stuck.
In Britain nearly all the wealth Is held by five per cent. In Heaven, so I read somewhere, There’s a different arrangement. SHIP OF FAITH
Mary had a little lamb, She named him Jesus Christ. Everywhere that Mary went The goods were overpriced.
Mary’s Son became a man Who started to declaim: ‘Unless you hear the word of God, You’ll have yourselves to blame.’
Jesus preached wherever he went To prostitutes and thieves: ‘Unless you manage to repent, You’ll fall like autumn leaves.’
The Jews found Christ a nuisance So they nailed him to a tree. (You’ll have to read the gospels For the authorised biography.)
Let’s set aside all differences And learn to work together; Though I’m a member of a different tribe, I recognise my brother.
You were born inside a stable And in a manger laid. A silver star stood overhead Whilst kings and shepherds prayed.
Your father was a carpenter, Your mother was a virgin; Your followers were fishermen Who cast their nets for sturgeon.
You’re Alpha and Omega, The first born and the last; The captain of the ship of faith, The deck, the sails, the mast.
Remember how on Noah’s Ark You salvaged eight or seven? Let’s climb aboard our fragile bark And steer a course for Heaven.
TREE OF KNOWLEDGE
In Andalucia you will see An orange tree in every square. At dusk its tangy fragrance Invigorates the air.
Fresh fruit is firm and tempting Inviting you to eat. However you’ll discover It is anything but sweet.
It tastes as bitter as wormwood And sour as the devil’s sweat. Those who have managed more than one Have not recovered yet.
The moral here is crystal clear And not confined to Spain. Free lunches are inedible And poverty is pain.
How long, how long in infinite vain pursuit Of this or that free orange or grapefruit? Unless we pay the supermarket tag, We sadden after none or bitter fruit.
SELF-CRITICISM
When I re-read my early work, I shake my head in mortal shame. The best of it stands up quite well, The rest of it completely lame.
I’m tempted to scoop up the runts And hurl them on the hungry fire; To build a paper pyramid And set alight a funeral pyre.
But some force always makes my hand Return them to the folder. (It’s difficult to understand; Perhaps I’m simply getting older.)
Burning the offspring of my brain Would be a body blow. So what if they are halt or lame, What father treats his children so?
Tapestry weavers on the loom Of language working late at night Can always find a darkened room To hide their failures out of sight.
THE BLUES
I woke up this morning And decided to stay in bed. I’ve got this throbbing threnody Echoing inside my head. Someone call a doctor To see if I’m alive or dead. Either way I’ve got the blues.
I stagger over to the mirror; Bloodshot eyes return my gaze. Puffed up like a pillow, I barely recognise my face. Last night was a killer, You can end your life in various ways. Anyway I’ve got the blues.
I fumble for the radio, I need a soothing symphony, Heavenly choirs to sing to me. Come on, where are you channel three? What’s this mocking cacophony? Somebody’s got it in for me. Now I’ve really got the blues.
RUSTY
When I met you I was lonely and dirty But in those days I was only thirty. I still don’t understand Why you took me by the hand And led me homewards To my motherland. Many thought I was mad or bad, You realised I was merely sad. You recognised my sorrow And gave me a tomorrow Together with a roof As a tangible proof Of your uncomplicated love for me. The hope which was about to evaporate Condensed and changed my attitude. I was so overwhelmed by gratitude That I may have forgotten to say Thank you. If I did, I say it now: ‘Muchisimas gracias amiga mia; Te quiero ahora y para siempre.’
TRIBUTE TO DYLAN
Imprisoned in my attic, I’m measuring the static. The warnings are sporadic, But none the less emphatic.
I can hear which way the wind’s blowing, I can see the writing on the wall. I sit and watch the river flowing And I know a hard rain’s going to fall.
LONGING
I walked along the lonely brow Of our favourite hill. I saw the farmer with his plough, The miller with his mill.
I saw your face etched on a cloud (It was definitely you.) My surprise was such, I cried aloud, Transported by the view.
But you’re no longer with me now, We’ve gone our separate ways. You’ve left me with the problem how To endure my endless days.
TELEPATHY
Last night I had a curious dream As I lay on my own. You were quoting poetry at me Down a black old-fashioned telephone.
I couldn’t understand a word, (Your voice was none too clear.) When I asked you who the author was, You claimed it was Shakespeare.
In future when you contact me, Please will you stick to prose. A rose by any other name Becomes a rambling rose.
DEVIL’S ADVOCATE
When the good Lord devised the earth, With land and sea around its girth, He chuckled in his glacial mirth: ‘I’ll give people something to remember, I’ll create an elaborate torture chamber; Ostensibly delightful But really rather spiteful. I’ll introduce famine, pestilence, disease In addition to lush meadows and green trees. Hatred, war and blood-shed As well as fishes on the river bed. Terrorists, bastards, fanatics Mixed up with mystics, saints, ecstatics. Suffering, hopelessness, despair In landscapes verdant, soft and fair. But the cream of the joke Is that I’ll write a boring book Ordering my creation (Plus all of their relations) To bow done (wait for this) in gratitude And worship me and me alone. And when the planet is destroyed And the rivers run with blood, I’ll smile and say ‘I told you so! That’s why I sent the flood!’ And when poor disembodied souls Come hammering at my door, I’ll tell them all to go to Hell – That’s what I made it for!’
COWBOY BLUES
I built my house on shifting sand And became a poor man in the land. My wife said she’d outgrown me; My kids didn’t want to know me.
Blood is thicker than water but water’s pretty thin. Was I paying the price of poverty or the penalty for sin? In the game of life, if you lose the prize You wind up strangled by family ties.
God’s a capitalist. That’s for sure. He gives to the rich and takes from the poor. The Bible’s full of promises But life’s just filled with compromises.
Am I bitter? You bet I am. I feel like a strawberry in a jam. I feel like a can of rancid ham. I feel like a sacrificial lamb. I feel like the track underneath a tram. I feel like a baby in a pram Careering down a mountainside. I don’t know whether to scramble out Or hide my face beneath the covers And dream of other lovers.
DEATH ROW
I’ve been feeling a little flat lately, Touching all the walls. Peering through the window, Examining my balls.
Waiting for the sun to sink Like a chastised child. Re-reading the Bible, Gentle Jesus meek and mild.
Fighting a miasma Of impotence and hate; Dancing with chimeras, (Where are you Terry Waite?)
Lying on my iron bunk, Staring at the ceiling. Listening to leaden music tapes, Devoid of any feeling.
Still I’m not downhearted Despite the things I’ve said. Although my life’s just started, Tomorrow I’ll be dead.
Roll on death and greet me, I wait with open arms. Do not try to cheat me, I know about your charms.
You taste as sweet as honey That lingers on the tongue. You can keep your money – I’m waiting to be hung.
WORLD WAR THREE
The poor are ignored by the rich, The sane turn away from the mad. The healthy recoil from the sick But the good have to live with the bad.
The old are despised by the young, The black are enslaved by the white. The beetle rotates in the dung As the daylight surrenders to night.
The people elect their oppressors, The prisoner and jailer embrace. The tyrant selects his successors Whose features resemble his face.
Depression gives way to despair; We need Sherlock Holmes on the case. Why is humanity inclined to insanity And did guns start the human race?
The earth is engulfed by destruction; Mankind is destroyed by the fall. Phosphorescent earthquakes Make the firmament shake Till a stillness saturates all, Except for an echoing whisper: ‘This is the way the world ends, First with a bang, then a whimper.’ Whilst on the dead ether Comes drifting the sigh: ‘Man, that was just like the fourth of July!’
TO BE OR NOT TO BE
The rational thing to do Would be to shoot myself. But as David Hume pointed out, Reason is and always will be The slave of passion. Smug, Tory, atheistic Edinburgh free-thinker, I owe you my life! (I don’t know whether to thank you or not.) If we meet beyond this veil of tears, I’ll order you a whisky and soda. You can pay for it With the royalties from your ‘Treatise of Human Nature’. To quote from your fellow Scottish philosopher Ian McCaskill, We must be moderate or good. He never said anything About being generous. REDEMPTION
My life has been a fairy tale, It’s certainly been grim. I fell into the well of fate And found I couldn’t swim.
The well was dark and desolate And full of scrambling rats, Scurrying like bookies’ clerks To avoid the cats.
The cats were miserable as sin And cursing those who threw them in. Their eyes resembled smouldering coals From the fire of human souls.
I begged the Lord to set me free And not to let me drown. The bats were black as they could be And hanging upside down.
I know I’ve been a sinner And that my sins are grave, But You who made the universe Can also my soul save.
I’m wiser now but sadder And running out of hope. Please throw me down a ladder Or just a threadbare rope!
Lord, I didn’t mean it! Please let me try again. I long to breathe unfetid air And rejoin the world of men.
To fret about our destiny Has been a waste of time Ever since emerging From the primordial slime.
We live, we die, who gives a damn? Except our next of kin; But just in case there is a God, Let’s keep away from sin.
HELL
‘Hell is other people’ Wrote Jean-Paul Sartre. My fraternal French philosopher How right thou art! Perhaps you should have mentioned That it’s also poverty; A grinding-down as constant As the force of gravity. Hell on earth began When money was invented; The silver coins were minted And the pretty notes were printed. Judas bartered in the garden Then for mercy tried to beg. He paid with his immortal soul; (We limped off with an arm and a leg.)
CAIN AND ABEL
Today, on TV, I saw one snake eat another. Their colouring suggested They were cousins more than brothers. The diner was dusty brown and striped; The dinner was green as grass and well spotted. The brown snake began with the other’s head Swallowing it in one swift, sudden movement; And then the body followed suit, Inch by quivering inch. It was an interesting philosophical conundrum Whether the interior snake was wearing the exterior Or simply being digested by it. Judging by the reptilian satisfaction On the suffocating, dislocated features of the stripy serpent And the glint of triumph in its glassy eye, It was enjoying the encounter more; But not by much (About a neck, I’d say.) Besides, by now I couldn’t see the other’s face, Only its sinuously trembling tail… It should really have shed its scaly skin Before feeling it dissolve in an acid bath But when you’re caught with your fangs down, You’re beyond help. (No time for goodbyes, let alone wills.) Still, fascinating stuff; I just wish I hadn’t had my mouth full. The nightmare sight of travelling, unravelling alimentary canals Desperately devouring each other Does somewhat dull the appetite. In fact, To get any lower, You have to turn to human beings.
SOMETIMES
Sometimes I feel like I'm under a curse. I could have done better And I could have done worse.
I could have done worse But I might have done better. Fortune seems to favour The jet-setting go-getter.
Bob Dylan said 'Choose Fortune or fame. Either way you'll lose; Neither's what they claim.'
W.H. Davies said 'Stop, stand and stare!' He was a pauper, Dylan a billionaire.
W.H. Auden Was pretty good About switching off the stars And sweeping away the wood.
William Butler Yeats Was a bit of a berk To suggest that we perfect Our life or our work.
I've spent too much time Perched on my arse Watching paint dry And the growth of the grass.
I'm not complaining That nothing's gone right. I go to bed in the morning And get up at night.
When I feel restless I bounce my ball In the back garden Against the shed wall.
When I feel sad I pause to think And if things are really bad I'll pour a drink.
When I feel lonely I'll phone a friend. If no one answers Then I'll just pretend.
When I feel bored I'll borrow a book And peruse a few stanzas Beside a babbling brook.
Each evening I pray For the Lord to deliver. I'll be dead one day And it'll all be over.
St Peter will say 'Let the last be first! Son, you should have done better But you could have done worse.'
STORM
The noise of the storm Turns the mucousy worm In the moist earth. The Donner und Blitzen Startles the vixen Damply giving birth. The might and the main Of the storm-driven rain Whiplashes the plain With a thunderous refrain. It’s far heavier now; Its repetitive thud Unsettles the cow Consuming the cud Cankered over with mud. The flowers rejoice, Recognising the voice Of the hammering, sheeting, Metronome beating, Savagely sleeting, Juggernaut rain.
KATE (In memory of Kate de Pulford)
Goodbye, dearest Kate, What can we do? Nobody dreamed This would happen to you.
You cycled to work Trusting to luck But your bike was no match For a twenty ton truck.
The paramedics worked hard To prolong your survival; They laboured in vain, You were dead on arrival.
You went straight to paradise When you left here. A spirit like yours Could not disappear.
At the risk of a cliché (Which in your case is true.) This world was not woven For someone like you.
We’re so glad we met, You had so much to give; We’ll never forget you As long as we live.
MATRIMONIAL ADVICE
You don’ wan’ no weak woman; You wan’ a strong woman. Strong enough to carry home All de heavy shoppin’.
You don’ wan’ no thin woman; You wan’ a fat woman. One who know how to cook Roas’ beef an’ yorkshire puddin’.
You don’ wan’ no pretty woman; You wan’ an ugly woman. Dat way she always grateful An’ she never deceive you.
You don’ wan’ no young woman; You wan’ an old woman. Dat way she know how to run de house An’ enjoy a good pension.
You don’ wan’ no intelligent woman; You wan’ a stupid woman. Dat way she don’ question Why she doin’ all de work.
THE RAGING PROCESS
When I was younger my muscles were taut, My limbs were well sculpted and lean; As I get older, the changes unfolding Are bordering on the obscene.
My body’s suffered serious wear and tear, My spirit has followed suit And although I’m increasingly inclined to prayer, I’m becoming as bald as a coot.
The worst thing of all is that I’ve run to fat, My thighs are now rubbing together; My jowls would look good on a diplomat And my skin has the texture of leather.
My sight is quite misty; my thoughts rather dim, I’m consistently short of breath. In fact my aspect has grown so grim, I’m no longer afraid of death.
Hector, my doctor, is unsympathetic And barks in his German syntax: ‘My friend it is all part of ze getting-old-process, I sink zat you ought to relax!’
My eyes are baggy; my flesh is saggy, I’m a canvas for varicose veins. I’ve also become the reluctant recipient Of innumerable unspecified pains.
My bones are aching; my heart is breaking, My reactions are terribly slow. All I have left is my sense of denial Which I hope will be last to go.
DENISE
My friend Denise had a brilliant wheeze For shifting a bit of her blubber. She rode to work on an exercise bike And became a weight-watchers clubber.
Pills and Slimfasts, laxative blasts, On any gimmick she’d pounce. I have to confess that it seems to be working – She’s succeeded in losing an ounce.
With progress like this, the sheer self-denial Into insignificance pales. She’s now saving up for a distorting mirror And a set of industrial scales.
Good Luck Denise! We all wish you well! You know, fat or thin, I’m your friend. Although I know that you’re going through Hell, You’ll be a string-bean in the end!
YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU
The rich dread dying Because they’ve got so much to lose; Their mansions and their palaces, Their glossy Gucci shoes. Their houses and their horses, Their butlers and their wives; The solid-silver coffee spoons They’ve used to measure out their lives. Their paintings and fine furnishings Imported from afar, Their Pollocks and Picassos And expensive objets d’art. Their power and their influence, Their restaurants and their clubs, Their so-obliging prostitutes And charming country pubs. Their hunting, shooting, fishing, The retriever at their feet And their neighbour’s nubile daughter Whom they’ve just arranged to meet. Their Rollers and their Daimlers, Their Bentleys and their Jags And their fatuous silly features In the sycophantic mags. (And visits up to London When ‘funds are rather low’ For some brisk insider dealing With ‘a friend who’s in the know.’) They’ve got to leave the lot behind (No hand-luggage allowed) When they trade their frayed Armani suits For a new Versace shroud.
MEMORY
When I was knee-high to a fly I used to spend hours on end Standing on the landing Eavesdropping without stopping My parents’ living-room murmuring Beside the dying fire; My father’s low drone Playing tennis with My mother’s mellow tone At least an octave higher. Although my mother’s time has gone Those intimate echoes linger on. When I too flee this vale of tears, Their voices will still fill my ears.
AMATEUR ASTRONOMER
Andromeda is Heaven’s daughter, Cygnus is her swan. Aquarius holds water But Aries rushes on.
Bootes is a herdsman, Auriga a charioteer. Canes Venatici are hunting dogs Just in case you appear.
Camelopardalis is a deserted ship, Cancer is a crab. Canis major and minor are dog Latin; Aldebaran is Arab.
Capricornus is a sea-goat, Cetus is a whale. Berenice’s hair needs Berenice’s comb And Libra tips the scale.
Corona Borealis is the Northern Crown, Corvus is a crow. Sagittarius the archer who shot him down With Sagitta, his arrow.
Draco lines his maidens up But Delphinus is a dolphin. So Crater remains an empty cup And Virgo stays a virgin.
Equulus is a half-grown horse, Gemini are twins. Hercules is strong, of course, And dominates the Lynx.
Hydra the winding water-snake Longs for Eridanus the river. Leo the lion and Lepus the hare Look up at Lacerta the lizard.
Lyra plucks her seductive lyre To Monoceros the unicorn. From Orion’s waist hangs a hunting belt And from his heel a Scorpion.
Pegasus is the horse with wings, Pisces the dreaming fish. Scutum Sobieski is Sobieski’s shield Beyond reach of Perseus.
Sculptor is ambidextrous, Sextans is his sextant. Aquila is the eagle Encircling the serpent.
Vulpecula is a crafty fox, Ursas major and minor are bear. Taurus the bull bodes rising stocks And Triangulum is not square.
RITA
I don’t want to listen To your pointless twitter, Your emotional litter, Your tedious squitter Or your nervous titter. I know that you feel bitter Alone in your bed-sitter In the centre of Exeter. But I’m no arbiter, Comforter or Presbyter And your non-sequiturs Make me jitter For a liter of bitter. I quite like the taffeta You bought from the outfitter (It’s a potent transmitter Of your total lack of glitter!) Per capita, You’re the dullest rabbiter This side of Sagitta (You have no competitor.) Look, I’ve got to read the gas-meter And then see my solicitor Before travelling to Jupiter. I’m no counterfeiter, Saccharine-sweet sitter Or patient interlocutor; More a rapid exiter (I prefer the perimiter.) You’re a heavy hitter, A cerebellum splitter, A fratricide committer, An equanimity quitter. Why can’t you embitter The needle-clacking knitter, The monitor or janitor Or even the sub-editor Instead of this poor crittur?
JUVENILIA - (AGED 11)
STAR:
S ilently still, they twinkle against the black. T rillions of miles away, they look microscopic. A imlessly they hang in the sky. R ays hit the earth but there is no light.
RAIN:
R acing down the sides of obstacles. A drop races for all it is worth to beat another. I watch from inside a stuffy house. N o-one stirs.
FROG:
F ascinating creature jumping on his strong hind limbs. R ocking gently on a large stone. O ccasionally giving a flip to satisfy himself he’s still awake. G uiding his beady eyes along his surroundings.
TREE:
T owering high above the world. R ising every year another six inches. E arnestly I gaze up at its branches. E ndlessly the network of branches goes on.
ANT:
A nother tiny insect reaches the tile. N ine others arrive and then a host. T ogether they start a new home.
The right of Simon R. Gladdish to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
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