|
|
|
Last Updated: 06/09/2010 13:15:04
Larkin 25 - City By The Sea
By Jade Kennedy
|
The grey clouds hastened onwards,
burdened with winter rain.
Brought by North sea winds,
they weighed heavily on the bricks and mortar,
of the city by the sea.
Walls that hold tales of life.
Of lives lived behind the same painted door.
From the first steps to the very last.
The night claims these streets now,
voices become muffled and lost in dark shadows.
Street lights now have their part to play,
and flicker in sterile orange hues,
illuminating the cold wet cobbles.
Figures move beneath these lights,
in hurried and watchful strides.
Darkened house windows,
mirror life back out to the streets.
With heads bowed and shrouded in black,
the safety of many has gone.
Now the sound of lone footsteps,
echo down alleys devoid of humanity.
In the city by the sea.
|
|
Copyright © Jade Kennedy 2010
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - Bite For You By Robert Swan
|
|
I'm not the punctual kind,
But tonight I'm in time,
To feed you a rhyme,
That bites.
It bites your head,
It bites your heart,
It remakes the template from the start.
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - Man Flu By Mark Walmsley
|
|
How can I possibly get up this morning?
I'm going to die and that's a warning.
Feeling half dead,
Got a splitting head,
I can barely walk.
My throat hurts - when I talk,
All my snotty - wet - hankies,
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry All Gummed Up By Catherine Scott
|
|
In the 1960's there was a big campaign,
'Keep Britain Tidy' went the refrain.
Do you think we could bring it back again,
The stuff on the streets is blocking the drain.
There's tin cans here and bottles there,
Wrappers, fag ends - all sorts of ware,
Take it home with you, you dirty mare,
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Grannyma By Dennis Wild
|
|
Grannyma, my father's mother,
Lives behind four Salford walls
Like a tinned and wrinkled prune
Drawing all her will for living
Not from God, or man, or Guinness
But from ceramic souvenirs
And her scrapbook of fluffy kittens
She's collected throughout the years.
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Jekyll and Hyde By Bernard Franklin
|
|
For changes in human behaviour,
I think that the biggest by far,
is the obsession and pride that we all have,
in the wonderful motor car.
We treat it with such a reverence,
like an icon that's sent from the Gods,
but it can turn the most mild mannered people,
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - The Rooster By Jody McKenna
|
|
Waves and lonely music
Desolate mountain standing proud
Tilting trees with nothing on 'em
Singing what she sees in clouds
Moon sinking over shadows
Birds flee free from harm
Frogs off rocks to catch the springs
Read more...
|
|
Poetry The Fun Fair By Roy Amers
|
|
People arrive for the time of their lives,
Children and husbands and also their wives,
Music and lights fill the night air,
and the smell of candy floss at the fun fair,
Slow rides and fast rides for the masses,
fun filled balloons filled with strange gases,
Coconuts a flying off their stands,
Read more...
|
|
Poetry Larkin 25 - I'm Not Larkin By Kerry-Joe Pulford
|
|
I'm not Larkin.
I only want one hit,
Like Wordsworth,
The Daffodil one.
Don't get me wrong
I'm all for being prolific ...
But it's 25 to f***
And I'm still struggling
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Beverley's Grumble By Jan McGeachie
|
|
Ice and snow, coldest winter you say?
I yearn for the norm, every day
What do you expect? Let me be
I hate having now reached sixty
I'd really rather be o'er there
With Under Fives, for whom I care
Where ethics never slipped away
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - To See By Belinda Barchard
|
|
Sometimes, just sometimes
We too, wish we were blind
Wish we could live outside our own minds
Live freely and without the confines
Of our tormented souls
Those thoughts and those feelings
Over which we have no hold
And sometimes no control
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - Life Is 140 Characters By Dave Windass
|
|
I used to enjoy telling the world
What I was up to
Using 140 characters
But I woke up one morning
And realised that writing
For 140 characters Is a lot harder
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - A Mother's Lament By David Thompson
|
|
Something borrowed, something blue,
So little time, so much to do,
Things to buy, things to try on,
All for a day that's here and gone.
A wedding list that's far too long,
Who to cross off, bound to be wrong,
A day that's meant to be full of joy,
Read more...
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - Dust Jackets By Melanie Pearce
|
|
I found a book in another town
It attracted my eye, one I couldn't put down
It promised me verses and secrets it hid
The kind of stories to pass to your kid
Instead it showed me the flaws in my self
This kind of book should be left on the shelf
But this jacket stood out amongst the rest
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Larkin 25 - Local Language By Robert Swan
|
|
'Cunts' can be either 'Silly cunts',
Or be reclaimed as feminine and pretty,
But 'cunts' not always a swear-word,
When you get dragged up in Hull City.
If you think something smells fishy
Then that's a pity,
So I'm gunnu explain
Read more...
|
|
|
Poetry - Love Story By Dennis Wild
|
|
The day we met
a hoary old wildebeest
stumbled into a chrome-decored
gelati emporium
and gasped.
The profusion of colour
all but dazzled
his scrub wearied eyes,
Read more...
|
|
|
|
| What's Happening? |
|
|
|
| Chill Out |
|
|
|
| About Us |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|