|
|
 |
Poetry |
|
 |
|
Last Updated: 26/04/2006 14:27:04
In the Kitchen
By Maolsheachlann O' Ceallaigh
|
Dawn chews her toast and gazes out
At snowflakes falling through the air.
The comb runs gently through her hair -
Her mother knows how much she hates
The roots pulled at. They think about
The very same thing, unaware,
But neither of them thinks of spring.
Eat up or else you'll never grow,
Her mother sighs to the radio.
Outside, the white world waits. And waits.
And neither feels life blossoming
As softly as the fall of snow.
|
|
|
Copyright © Maolsheachlann O' Ceallaigh 2006
|
|
Poetry - APATHY! By Rich Mills
|
|
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
APATHY, APATHY, APATHY.
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Muses In Moonlight By Kay Gower
|
|
I sat beneath the willow, and stepped through the looking glass
Long ages, eons passed, suns were born and flamed into supernova, galaxies wheeled at least one revolution around the cosmos, between one moment and the next, as the lake and I had a chat.
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Reality Shows By Patrick Henry
|
|
China is making uniforms for the British Army.
In Aldershot golf clPubs old Colonels go barmy.
Our image and defences gravely threatened.
The Chinks will stitch us up when they lose the thread-end.
Our regiments to look like aliens in the desert war,
And U.S allies to hit them with friendly fire.
When Royal Marines'
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Just The Way It Is By Joe Hakim
|
|
Scraping by on the
minimum wage,
my life in a cage,
counting down the days
until I next get paid,
watch the money come in,
watch it fly out again
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Last No'ell At Scarborough By Patrick Henry
|
|
Christmas day comes. I've seen a wilder funeral.
Pubs open their eyes, their doors in morning mist a while;
Pull a free pint if they should remember you.
Then lunchtime's a bad moment if you are a turkey,
A vegetarian or a republican amid the carnage.
It gets no better for anyone by the TV stage.
The Monarch says today
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - The Voyage By Andy Grant
|
|
I'm leaving now across the sea who knows to where,
Maybe to an island or distant coastline,
Never touched by man before, there to be explored,
Leaving behind a life so tired with faces missed,
Not knowing if they will be here when I return.
Out of the bay where friends grew up strong,
Passing barges laden with
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Stop Me And Buy One By Lee Cassanell
|
|
His gigantic cone
Caught the light of my eyes
I was five nearly six
When he parked up outside
And I knew from that day
That it's not a bad life
When the sun's on your face
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - A Small Price To Pay By Katherine Horrex
|
|
My friend said I'm naïve
Because I found it hard
To believe when she said that she'd
Give Gary a blowjob
In exchange for 10 grand.
Apparently, if he
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Geriatric Blues By Maurice Fairfield
|
|
Now all my fellow oldies I hope you're feeling well
Listen what I'm sayin' cause I got a tale to tell
I got the blues, I got the blues. I got the geriatric blues
Joints are creakin' bladder's leakin' teeth are missin'
Havin' trouble pissin,' got the blues, the geriatric blues.
Go spread the news about the blues,
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Response To Those Who Doubt (You know who you are) By Joe Hakim
|
|
Dead from the neck up
motherfuckers,
taking me to task
for the thing they lack:
a passion that burns
and erupts
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Showdown At Flamingo-Land By Patrick Henry
|
|
Flamingo-Land is sheer paradise captured in a name.
Exquisite birds turn the trees to fiery flame,
Perching there on a rosy-fingered dawn,
Or at dusk stretching daylight to sublime perfection.
In the wildlife park creatures are good as kept by Noah;
Safe from storm, flood and savagery
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Thoroughly Lagered-Up Charlie By Jane Foster and Michelle Dee
|
|
I'm thoroughly lagered-up Charlie
I'm having such a ball
I've got 15 toilets
But I piss against the wall
I'm thoroughly lagered-up Charlie
I eat out of a box
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - When Frankie Met Prickly By Michelle Dee, Elsie Creek and Jane Foster
|
|
Frankenstein's Fanny met with Prickly Pussy
In the middle of a hot, hot day
Prickly told a joke which split Frankie's stitches
And blew her clean away
Frankenstein's Fanny and Prickly Pussy
Went out for a ride
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - The Maritime Museum, Hull By Maolsheachlann O' Ceallaigh.
|
|
The recorded cry of some dead whale resounds
Over and over again. Rusted harpoons
Hang from the walls. On winter afternoons
Descendants of past sailors make the rounds
And mouth the names: Diana, Truelove, Swan.
Just syllables now. But children must have thrilled
To hear them, once.
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - THE PRICE WE PAY By Del Abe Jones.
|
|
...We're going to stay the course, of course!...
That's what our Pres has always said
We're three years into this crazy War
With nearly twenty-four hundred Dead.
Seventeen thousand wounded folks
At least, that's the official count
With estimates of forty-some thousand
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - We Are All Cartoons Now By Joe Hakim
|
|
Setting up a trap
the immaculate disappointment
capped off with regret,
things we could have
changed
or done
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Saint Patrick's Day By Del Abe Jones.
|
|
The Patron Saint of Ireland
Died in the Fifth Century
On the seventeenth of March
Is that anniversary.
That day is during Lent
When the Irish celebrate
With dance and drink and feast
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - I Remember It Well By Jon Stewart
|
|
I met her in Retro
No, it was in Mint
I said I was loaded
You said you were skint!
Ah yeah...I remember it well.
Said she was from Bransholme
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Politics On The Dance-floor By Patrick Henry
|
|
Cuba's dangerous crocodile-shape looms long and slim
As a laid girl, a good cigar, or Castro's red regime.
A pianist plays Blues out of his back-street door:
An instrument from Chicago that'll send no more;
Nor glitzy Cadillac cabs that take you for a ride
For five bucks anywhere and girls
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - A Popular Theme By Jane Foster
|
|
For Michael Cassar 1979 - 2000
A popular theme - the good die young,
With lips unparted, praise unsung,
The ode, the book, the song, the rhyme,
The tale of the young man cut down in his prime,
The turn of the screw, the whizz of the wheel,
The young man dead on a fiver deal.
Read more...
|
|
|
|
|
| What's Happening? |
|
|
|
| Chill Out |
|
|
|
| About Us |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|