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Poetry |
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Last Updated: 07/01/2007 19:57:04
Once a Thought Night
By Mike Watts
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In this age of new disease
Where bronchial factories wheeze
Chronic clouds pour poison
Land lubricates the ocean
And every inch of green
Is bullied by machine.
On this hot and heavy breather
With skin a sweat of fever
Multiple scabs of vice
Plague the scalp like lice
A bursting ball to share
This head with thinning air.
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Dear Bear and Bat
Whale and Cat
The clock of human history
Ticks towards catastrophe
And all the signs portend
Soon our time will end.
And as light begins to fade
On this millennium's first decade
I draw a thin dark curtain
Unsure of what seems certain
Until night begins to creep
And I am saved by sleep.
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Copyright © 2007 Mike Watts |
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Poetry - Old Friend By Shaun Heesom
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Under the influence of alcohol
An old friend almost died
Some southern tart broke his heart
And never even cried
We grew up through school together
I guess, from the age of nine
When my marriage was
Read more...
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Poetry - One Day In Daphnes Life By Mike Watts
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Creeps creeping through her house helped themselves
And left caramel-coloured shit reeking in every room.
She was scrubbing when the police arrived.
In the lounge, a new space carpeted with dust
And her yucca collapsed
Against the couch.
In the kitchen an open freezer
Read more...
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Poetry - Christmas Spree By Del Abe Jones.
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The World is in turmoil
There's War everywhere
People starving and homeless
And not enough seem to care.
It's not their kid who's dying
In someplace across the sea
Read more...
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Poetry - The Festive Fifty By Jim Higo
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I could top the charts with a power number,
A political song, raise the masses from slumber,
Do a gig on the Humber.
Dance on stage with footwork nifty,
I'd rather be in the festive fifty.
I could get Mick Jones to
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Poetry - My Girlfriend Can't Erase Her Past By Maurice Fairfield
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My girlfriend can't erase her past
It's giving me the blues
The signs of other lovers last
She's covered in tattoos
She'd been around the block a bit
I knew that from the start
Read more...
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Poetry - A Day of Infamy By Del Abe Jones.
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Around eight o'clock in the morn
In Nineteen forty-one
On December the Seventh
Our World War Two was begun.
We'd tried to stay out of it
And said, it was not our fight
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Poetry - More Is Not Better By Del Abe Jones.
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We have been at the War this time
Longer than that one in Forty-one
With maybe not as many casualties
But too many, more than one.
The right thing when we started
And sent Troops to Afghanistan
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Poetry - Number Two By Laura Fry
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That autumn day you brought bad tidings
Daddy was never coming back
I was so young, but understood it
And my whole world had turned to black
You didn't even let me say goodbye
Because all this time you just
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Poetry - Seven Come Eleven (after 9/11) By Del Abe Jones.
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On this day we remember
That "day of infamy"
And sadly we understand
More than we want to see.
A "sneak attack" on Freedom
And the American way
Read more...
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Poetry - Dancing Angels By Andy Grant
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We round the bend to see your might,
Your power raw and flames so bright,
You singe and burn the naked skin,
Begin to boil the blood within,
Water on the battle cry,
To fight the beast we fear inside,
You attack again with steam and smoke,
Read more...
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Poetry - Summer Babe By Beth McGann.
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So you let me know, cheers, by the lake
That we've capsized from our stolen state of grace.
The water looks so glassy now,
fragile seeming; curt somehow
The leaves pass no judgement on the vast waste of your head
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Poetry - On the Netto Breadline By Beth McGann.
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The path I walk is worn to bare rock
of ages pacing
woods between sea and hills
shafts of sunshine make wet stones
glisten over stunted roadside roses.
the sky abortion-red
pressing thorns into my destiny
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Poetry - Today's Climate By Joe Hakim
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As the fear pours out of
every television speaker,
congealing into the bitter ink
on the headlines on the
front of all the papers,
we prepare ourselves
for the hordes of paedophiles
Read more...
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Poetry - Where Once Was Pain By Merle R. Stone
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A hollow, empty shell of a man
to whom living was a bother.
Who would gratefully take his own life
but for the shame it would bring his father.
No easy way to carry on
and play as though things were well.
Read more...
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Poetry - An Open Letter to the Head of ITV1 Scheduling and The Dog Ate My Lottery Ticket By Beth McGann.
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I've just come back
from my nightly stroll,
me and the dog, alone
with one hundred billion fires
the dark trees, black like an absence
moving against the backdrop of the galactic dance,
beauty on an unimaginable scale,
Read More
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Poetry - Hide and Seek By Maurice Fairfield
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So catch me if you can
My good old playmate Death
Let's play our game of hide and seek
Till I run out of breath
You counted ten some time ago
Ready or not, you said
Read more...
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Poetry - Pie in The Sky By Shaun Heesom
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Where is the land of milk and honey
My pie in the sky with chocolate money
A bird in the hand a feather in the bush
Where the tall green plants grow vast and lush
The rivers flow full and deep red wine
Where the pigs fly up from time to time
Castles in the air
Read more...
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Poetry - Louder Than Words By Mike Watts
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'We have performed this very difficult task
Out of love for our people.
And we have suffered no damage
To ourselves, to our souls,
Or our characters .'
Heinrich Himmler
Read more...
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Poetry - Lament for Hull By Laura Fry
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I'm lying in the bed I made
No longer angry, now resigned to fate
For the follies of my twenties, I'll pay the high price
And live on in this hell that I thought was paradise
I gave not a thought when I jumped in head first
That I'd married the man I
Read more...
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Poetry - The Sound of the Sea By Beth McGann.
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the sound of the sea
an endless movement
like the pull of a horse
on the bridle, strong
underneath
rollers rattle the chalk pebbles smooth
in a cupped hand
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Poetry - Ashes To Ashes By Patrick Henry
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Down-under the dodgy digger is the flash tool to fool us all:
Over here, the cobber to ditch the blather and strike the flaming ball,
No wet Pom could hit for straight six, or toss-up a wrong-'un to skittle a side;
Pull all POM sheilas hard-up for it: ten top thin models lined up in a bed;
Read more...
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Poetry - The Battle of Cable Street 4th Oct 1936 - 4th Oct 2006 By Patrick Henry
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A lifetime since when that ring of steel clashed down these streets.
Boot-heels struck cobbles. Bin-lids for shields buckled in defence
To batons, rocks, banner-shafts. Ears cocked to hear drum-rolls and fast heart-beats.
Read more...
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Poetry - Oh, I Wish I'd Looked After Me Tits By Pam ('Chin') Aires
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Oh, I wish I'd looked after me dear old knockers,
Not flashed them to boys behind the school lockers,
Or let them get fondled by randy old dockers,
Oh, I wish I'd looked after me tits.
'Cos now I'm much older and gravity's winning.
It's Nature's revenge
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Poetry - Albert Hoffman's Bicycle By Joe Hakim
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Falling off,
falling out,
in my mind
there is no doubt
that everyone is
truly alone when
surrounded by the
Read more...
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