The Nature of this Blog and Blog policy.
I enjoy reasoned intelligent debate. The more the better. I enjoy comments and asides. You don’t have to agree with me but do me the courtesy of an intelligent, rational argument.
I accept that views are different on all matters but those differences can be aired in a civilised manner.
I will not tolerate the same old crew coming on to my blog under assumed names so that they can undermine, pick fault and cause trouble.
I will simply delete all comments which are abusive or contain personal derogatory statements. Likewise I will delete comments that are mean-minded and pedantic. I will also delete comments that are racist, homophobic or inciting violence and hatred.
This is a blog for intelligent adults. The most sensitive and controversial subjects (such as racism, religion, politics and hatred) can be dealt with in a civilised manner. If you are incapable of doing such then kindly do not comment. That saves me having to press the delete button.
Roy Harper – How Does It Feel? – One of my favourites.
This is one of my favourite songs. It speaks to me of the hypocrisy of our lives. I think we all display different sides of our personality to different people. In different situations we appear to have different persona altogether.
Where is the space that we can just be ourselves?
I can really identify this. As a young man I was determined not to sell my soul to anyone. I always had that attitude of Fuck It. But the game has its way of drawing you in and exacting the compromises. There are children involved and one is drawn into the process of earning a living. A career brings its strictures.
We all end up playing the game to one extent or another.
Roy used to tell the story of a policeman in Scandinavia that he stayed with. When he had his uniform on he enforced the law. When he got home he took his uniform off and rolled a joint.
We make our choices. Do we choose to fit in? Do we vote? Become a model citizen? Do we rebel and reject the aims of society? Reject the greed and selfishness? Reject the control? Or do we try and do both?
Do we have a schizophrenic existence?
We prostitute ourselves. We strap our watches to our wrists and sell our time. We sell our ideals and dreams. We sell our freedom.
We play the game – and nobody is free of that game.
How Does It Feel – Roy Harper
How Does It Feel
How does it feel to be completely unreal
How does it feel to be a voter
How does it feel to be a voluntary heel
I wonder who’s it is
I see you queuing up outside Saint Peter’s gate,
You can feel bona fide if you ride with the tide
But it’s not real
How does it feel to be out on your own
How does it feel to be thinking
How does it feel to be out on the run
With the mindless world at your heels
I wish I had no answers to put to you
Cos they got me so high tied I feel
like most of me has died
And it’s real
And outside on the dragon
And inside in the cold
Mammy’s on the bandwagon, daddy’s just getting old
And through the blood spew heavens
The roar of lust complains:
Please let me in I have no sin, but you know I’m not real
And how does it feel to be the master’s right hand nose
How does it feel to be lieutenant
How does it feel to be stood on someone’s toes
With a leech bleeding you for rent,
When you say you want a bit more rank
You wanna be a big wheel
You can feel magnified if you hide in
your pride… It’s not real
And how does it feel with a white flag in your fist
How does it feel to have two faces
How does it feel with your god strapped to your wrist
And him leading you such a chase
You got one set of words for him,
and you got another for me
You’re gonna feel mystified when you’re identified
Don’t worry kid it’s not real
And outside on the dragon
And inside in the cold
Mammy’s on the bandwagon, daddy’s just getting old
And through the blood spew heavens
The roar of lust complains:
Please let me in I have no sin, but you know I’m not real
And through the blood spew heavens
The roar of lust complains:
Please let me in I have no sin, but you know I’m not real
Roy Harper – The Game – an epic song
This is one of Roy’s epic songs and one of his best. Backed by a group of superstars he creates a heavy sound with a unique riff to back the power of those poetic lyrics.
This is a song with gravitas and scope spanning the whole of human civilisation. It rails against the claustrophobia of society and hankers after the freedom of the hunter gatherer hoping that there is a space somewhere where a man might be free. That space may be found in the bubble of love.
The game is played by those in power. They set the rules and we have no means of usurping them or changing the rules.
In the meantime we continue the struggle. There is no escape. We are prisoners within this game. All we can do is grab our moments, love and live, and try not to add to the madness. Leaving the world as clean as when we came into it is not a Keep Britain Tidy campaign.
The Game – Roy Harper
There’s an owl in the valley fixing his prey
He’s not counting the tally
It’s down to what comes up before the day
And the trees in the orchard were taken from a narrow view of time
Where the minds of the tortured perpetuated patron saints of crime
Oh civilisation.
I can fit into your puzzle but it’s hardly, hardly ever a hold
And I’ll tell you, yeah yeah, tell you the trouble
The habits I’ve got are more than 10.000 years old
And we cannot sell our souls to learning morals
Big brother is no place for us to slide
We cannot live by numbers or on laurels
And hardly on how far from death we hide.
And it’s not a case of rampant paranoia
But just an age I’d love to see unborn
Not that I’d be missing playing Goya
More like I feel awkward passing on
Civilisation, civilisation down to my children
Without a question.
While the prophets of freedom, battery farming brains for narrow minds
Have decided, yes they decided that meaning is far beyond the lives they left behind
As two thirds of the population dine
On scraps in shadow lengthening with time
While propaganda spreads the same old theme
You is me and we can change the game, bullshit.Oh but how many times have we written these lines
And delivered these signs and not made it happen
Walking the tightrope of taking our head off
Losing the rhythm, idealising and all criticising
And not realising that we’ve changed and left and we’ve gone.
And sad to be leaving the things we believe in but time has a way and we fly
The next age is born and the old hands are gone and done in the wink of an eye
No point in passing bad reason good guessing, no time for massing much more than can flourish with love.
And right now, my darling, I’m lying here dreaming of feeling, no daylight between us
So wherever you are and whenever I’m there is someplace we’ve got to be ours
Can we right-heartedly stand in this light and see what might turn out to be crazy enough, enough to be we ?
When we’ve had a past sad enough to last for sometime into the future
These storms have torn and true love is alone and the past is almost a failure
Consciences burn in the programme turn, computing the social behaviour
But yoke revolts, the foundation bolts and cries for yet another saviour.
And I’d pack my things on a pair of wings and tomorrow I’d be parting
With the summer birds and the winter herds for a place to face a new heart in
But it makes no difference, where I am I’m in the game first hand
There are no certain answers and no time to understand
The rules are set to paradox, coercion and blind faith
The goal’s a changing paradise, a moment out of date
The dream is righteous grandeur fit to flood the universe
The fact is more than meets the eye but less than runs the earth, running the earth.
And the prisoner of the present paces up and down inside his cell
He’s the living replacement, somersaulting from this psychic well
Screaming : ‘I’m the sponsor of a hell’
Voices like the sea inside a shell
Telling me I cannot stake a claim
Possession is a clue but not the game
So please leave this world as clean as when you came.
So please leave this world as clean as when you came
Please leave this world as clean as when you came
Please leave this world as clean as when you came
Please leave this world as clean as when you came.
Money – Pink Floyd – Greed?
This song always summed up a lot of my feelings about money. No matter how much anyone earns it is never enough. Everybody thinks they deserve the money they have – no matter how excessive that is.
I wonder how all those multimillionaire Businesspeople, Bankers, Rock Stars, Sportspeople, Comedians and Entertainers, who stuff away their money in tax evading havens, justify the huge sums they are paid? Do they really believe they are worthy of such large payments? Do they really look down at those toiling away in mundane jobs with an arrogant eye?
There is a strange irony about this song too, isn’t there? I wonder how much it actually made the band, the record executives and those others in the biz?
Money – Pink Floyd – lyrics Roger Waters
Money, get away
Get a good job with more pay
And your O. K.
Money, it’s a gas
Grab that cash with both hands
And make a stash
New car, caviar, four star daydream
Think I’ll buy me a football team
Money get back
I’m all right Jack
Keep your hands off my stack
Money, it’s a hit
Don’t give me that
Do goody good bullshit
I’m in the hi-fidelity
First class traveling set
And I think I need a Lear jet
(Sax and guitar solos)
Money, it’s a crime
Share it fairly
But don’t take a slice of my pie
Money, so they say
Is the root of all evil
Today
But if you ask for a rise
It’s no surprise that they’re
Giving none away
Away
Away
Away
Away…
World Government!! We Need It Now!!
There are so many issues that cannot be adequately dealt with by nations. These issues cross national boundaries and this is exploited by unscrupulous people. The issues that I believe a World Government could deal with would include:
Pollution
Global warming
Environmental destruction
Species extinction
War
Poverty
Overpopulation
Immigration
Multinational businesses
Workers’ rights and exploitation
Tax evasion
International organised crime
Sex trafficking
Drug trafficking
Religious fundamentalism
Racism
Terrorism
Human rights
Tyranny
Democracy
Misogyny
Gross inequality
At present these issues are inadequately dealt with through treaties and agreements between nations, threats, coercion, bribes and other arrangements. It enables rogue states to set different arrangements. It enables international businesses to use loopholes that enable them to exploit people, tax and health and safety. It allows wars, extreme poverty and the abuse of human rights.
The United Nations is a body that has addressed these issues but has limited powers and only an advisory capacity.
I would like something more democratic and with more teeth than the UN.
Of course there have been many political moves to create a World Government through political tyranny – the Fascists of Nazi Germany and the Communists of the USSR had an eye on world domination – neither of which would have resulted in a very pleasant outcome.
No. What we need is a benevolent body that is working for the good of everyone, that is based on a set of human rights such as are laid out in the UN charter of Human Rights. Such a body would need to be democratically elected and have safeguards to prevent it becoming tyrannical.
The move towards such a body began following the horrors of the First World War. A war such as that, with the spectre of chemical weapons and mass killing, was so horrific and far-reaching that politicians realised that something had to happen. What came out of it was the League of Nations. This was a league of 58 nations that was intended to solve problems that would prevent a second terrible World War. It failed when Hitler and the Axis powers left with the intention of first taking over Europe. The League of Nations had failed in its primary aim of preventing a Second World War.
Following World War Two, with the added horrors of nuclear and biological devastation facing the world the United Nations was set up. Presently 193 of the 196 countries are represented in the United Nations. They are brought together to solve the big issues such as those listed above. Unfortunately they do not have the power to do much more than talk, pass resolutions and apply limited pressure and limited force. Even so they exist as a moral force for good, a talking shop to air grievances and resolve issues and a chance for different countries with different opinions to air their views and receive support and criticism for their actions. I believe all that has been a positive force that has prevented wars and enhanced human rights. The UN has made the world a better place. But it is not anywhere near enough. It is dominated by the developed countries and, with the use of their vetoes, has failed to stop many conflicts. Too many times the UN has had to stand around impotently while atrocities occur. Something greater needs to happen. We need to move towards a government with real power.
A number of prominent persons, such as Albert Einstein, Winston Churchill, Bertrand Russell and Mohandas K. Gandhi, called on governments to proceed further by taking gradual steps towards forming an effectual federal world government. That is something I concur with.
I also think that this move towards a World Government is inevitable. It is there embedded in the human psyche. Reading Sci-fi one is always dealing with a world government. In the future nations do not exist. That idea is already there in human imagination and what is imagined one day becomes reality the next. If it can be imagined it can be achieved.
Personally I would like to see the end of this primitive tribalism of nations and move towards a more universal approach. I think that would do a great deal to put an end to exploitation, inequality and racism. But that is a dream for the future.
However, I am not stupid. I do not believe that the setting up of a proper federated World Government is not fraught with problems. Here are some that require solving:
How to set up a government which is democratic?
How to prevent corruption?
How to prevent tyranny?
How to prevent the abuse of power?
How to convince the wealthier countries that it is in their interests?
How to convince our present politicians to relinquish some of their power?
How to convince people, embedded in patriotic tribalism and nationalism, that it is in their interests to think more universally.
People are concerned that a World Government would develop into an abusive tyranny, that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. This is a real concern because it is true. Time after time we see the type of psychologically damaged people seeking and gaining power – the megalomaniacs, the sociopaths and psychopaths. They seem so plausible. They offer such bright solutions. But they are only interested in power and wealth and are utterly ruthless. They lie and deceive. Looking around the world we see lots of them holding the reins of power. There are many in all our political parties and on the boards of our multinationals. They are bad enough within a national government but what if they took over the world?
How could we put in checks and balances to prevent such mighty power being abused? How do we control the controllers?
Well I believe we see those checks and balances in operation in the best of democracies. I believe that with our advanced knowledge of psychology, democracy and politics it is possible for us to devise a system that would deliver a mechanism to prevent corruption, bribery and abuse of power. Not only that but I believe it is becoming essential for the survival of mankind on this planet. Without world government we a stumbling around through crisis after crisis – global warming, nuclear war, biological terrorism, environmental catastrophe – and we are in denial.
One mistake and that could be the end.
It is surely within our intelligence to devise a system that would work, within parameters that are acceptable.
World Government is, I believe, in the interests of all humans on this planet and is desperately needed by the rest of life we share this planet with. I just hope we have the intellect and foresight to make it happen!
Tony Harrison – V – A poem for our times?
In these days of tribalism where a new fascist National Front mob are no longer skinheads maybe Tony’s poem is even more relevant?
In these days when fascists march on the streets and a new group of immigrants is blamed maybe this poem has more relevance?
It was written during the days of the miners strike and was notorious for its use of four lettered words. But they were the words of the skinheads that were written on the graves.
V = Versus. That is what it has now become. Tribalism. Liberals V conservatives. Fascists V immigrants.
Tony Harrison
Next millennium you'll have to search quite hard to find my slab behind the family dead, butcher, publican, and baker, now me, bard adding poetry to their beef, beer and bread. With Byron three graves on I'll not go short of company, and Wordsworth's opposite. That's two peers already, of a sort, and we'll all be thrown together if the pit, whose galleries once ran beneath this plot, causes the distinguished dead to drop into the rabblement of bone and rot, shored slack, crushed shale, smashed prop. Wordsworth built church organs, Byron tanned luggage cowhide in the age of steam, and knew their place of rest before the land caves in on the lowest worked-out seam. This graveyard on the brink of Beeston Hill's the place I may well rest if there's a spot under the rose roots and the daffodils by which dad dignified the family plot. If buried ashes saw then I'd survey the places I learned Latin, and learned Greek, and left, the ground where Leeds United play but disappoint their fans week after week, which makes them lose their sense of self-esteem and taking a short cut home through these graves here they reassert the glory of their team by spraying words on tombstones, pissed on beer. This graveyard stands above a worked-out pit. Subsidence makes the obelisks all list. One leaning left's marked FUCK, one right's marked SHIT sprayed by some peeved supporter who was pissed. Far-sighted for his family's future dead, but for his wife, this banker's still alone on his long obelisk, and doomed to head a blackened dynasty of unclaimed stone, now graffitied with a crude four-letter word. His children and grandchildren went away and never came back home to be interred, so left a lot of space for skins to spray. The language of this graveyard ranges from a bit of Latin for a former Mayor or those who laid their lives down at the Somme, the hymnal fragments and the gilded prayer, how people 'fell asleep in the Good Lord', brief chisellable bits from the good book and rhymes whatever length they could afford, to CUNT, PISS, SHIT and (mostly) FUCK! Or, more expansively, there's LEEDS v. the opponent of last week, this week, or next, and a repertoire of blunt four-letter curses on the team or race that makes the sprayer vexed. Then, pushed for time, or fleeing some observer, dodging between tall family vaults and trees like his team's best ever winger, dribbler, swerver, fills every space he finds with versus Vs. Vs sprayed on the run at such a lick, the sprayer master of his flourished tool, get short-armed on the left like that red tick they never marked his work with much at school. Half this skinhead's age but with approval I helped whitewash a V on a brick wall. No one clamoured in the press for its removal or thought the sign, in wartime, rude at all. These Vs are all the versuses of life From LEEDS v. DERBY, Black/White and (as I've known to my cost) man v. wife, Communist v. Fascist, Left v. Right, Class v. class as bitter as before, the unending violence of US and THEM, personified in 1984 by Coal Board MacGregor and the NUM, Hindu/Sikh, soul/body, heart v. mind, East/West, male/female, and the ground these fixtures are fought on's Man, resigned to hope from his future what his past never found. The prospects for the present aren't too grand when a swastika with NF (National Front)'s sprayed on a grave, to which another hand has added, in a reddish colour, CUNTS. Which is, I grant, the word that springs to mind, when going to clear the weeds and rubbish thrown on the family plot by football fans, I find UNITED graffitied on my parents' stone. How many British graveyards now this May are strewn with rubbish and choked up with weeds since families and friends have gone away for work or fuller lives, like me from Leeds? When I first came here 40 years ago with my dad to 'see my grandma' I was 7. I helped dad with the flowers. He let me know she'd gone to join my grandad up in Heaven. My dad who came each week to bring fresh flowers came home with clay stains on his trouser knees. Since my parents' deaths I've spent 2 hours made up of odd 10 minutes such as these. Flying visits once or twice a year, And though I'm horrified just who's to blame that I find instead of flowers cans of beer and more than one grave sprayed with some skin's name? Where there were flower urns and troughs of water And mesh receptacles for withered flowers are the HARP tins of some skinhead Leeds supporter. It isn't all his fault though. Much is ours. 5 kids, with one in goal, play 2-a-side. When the ball bangs on the hawthorn that's one post and petals fall they hum Here Comes the Bride though not so loud they'd want to rouse a ghost. They boot the ball on purpose at the trunk and make the tree shed showers of shrivelled may. I look at this word graffitied by some drunk and I'm in half a mind to let it stay. (Though honesty demands that I say if I'd wanted to take the necessary pains to scrub the skin's inscription off I only had an hour between trains. So the feelings that I had as I stood gazing and the significance I saw could be a sham, mere excuses for not patiently erasing the word sprayed on the grave of dad and mam.) This pen's all I have of magic wand. I know this world's so torn but want no other except for dad who'd hoped from 'the beyond' a better life than this one, with my mother. Though I don't believe in afterlife at all and know it's cheating it's hard not to make a sort of furtive prayer from this skin's scrawl, his UNITED mean 'in Heaven' for their sake, an accident of meaning to redeem an act intended as mere desecration and make the thoughtless spraying of his team apply to higher things, and to the nation. Some, where kids use aerosols, use giant signs to let the people know who's forged their fetters Like PRI CE O WALES above West Yorkshire mines (no prizes for who nicked the missing letters!) The big blue star for booze, tobacco ads, the magnet's monogram, the royal crest, insignia in neon dwarf the lads who spray a few odd FUCKS when they're depressed. Letters of transparent tubes and gas in Düsseldorf are blue and flash out KRUPP. Arms are hoisted for the British ruling class and clandestine, genteel aggro keeps them up. And there's HARRISON on some Leeds building sites I've taken in fun as blazoning my name, which I've also seen on books, in Broadway lights, so why can't skins with spraycans do the same? But why inscribe these graves with CUNT and SHIT? Why choose neglected tombstones to disfigure? This pitman's of last century daubed PAKI GIT, this grocer Broadbent's aerosolled with NIGGER? They're there to shock the living, not arouse the dead from their deep peace to lend support for the causes skinhead spraycans could espouse. The dead would want their desecrators caught! Jobless though they are how can these kids, even though their team's lost one more game, believe that the 'Pakis', 'Niggers', even 'Yids' sprayed on the tombstones here should bear the blame? What is it that these crude words are revealing? What is it that this aggro act implies? Giving the dead their xenophobic feeling or just a cri-de-coeur because man dies? So what's a cri-de-coeur, cunt? Can't you speak the language that yer mam spoke. Think of 'er! Can yer only get yer tongue round fucking Greek? Go and fuck yourself with cri-de-coeur! 'She didn't talk like you do for a start!' I shouted, turning where I thought the voice had been. She didn't understand yer fucking 'art'! She thought yer fucking poetry obscene! I wish on this skin's words deep aspirations, first the prayer for my parents I can't make, then a call to Britain and to all nations made in the name of love for peace's sake. Aspirations, cunt! Folk on t'fucking dole 'ave got about as much scope to aspire above the shit they're dumped in, cunt, as coal aspires to be chucked on t'fucking fire. 'OK, forget the aspirations. Look, I know United's losing gets you fans incensed and how far the HARP inside you makes you go but all these Vs: against! against! against! Ah'll tell yer then what really riles a bloke. It's reading on their graves the jobs they did – Butcher, publican and baker. Me, I'll croak doing t'same nowt ah do now as a kid. 'ard birth ah wor, mi mam says, almost killed 'er. Death after life on t'dole won't seem as 'ard! Look at this cunt, Wordsworth, organ builder, This fucking 'aberdasher Appleyard! If mi mam's up there, don't want to meet 'er listening to me list mi dirty deeds, and 'ave to pipe up to St fucking Peter ah've been on t'dole all mi life in fucking Leeds! Then t'Alleluias stick in t'angels' gobs. When dole-wallahs fuck off to the void What'll t'mason carve up for their jobs? The cunts who lieth 'ere wor unemployed? This lot worked at one job all life through. Byron, 'Tanner', 'Lieth 'ere interred'. They'll chisel fucking poet when they do you and that, yer cunt, 's a crude four-letter word. 'Listen, cunt!' I said, 'before you start your jeering the reason why I want this in a book 's to give ungrateful cunts like you a hearing!' A book, yer stupid cunt, 's not worth a fuck! 'The only reason why I write this poem at all on yobs like you who do the dirt on death 's to give some higher meaning to your scrawl.' Don't fucking bother, cunt! Don't waste your breath! 'You piss-artist skinhead cunt, you wouldn't know and it doesn't fucking matter if you do, the skin and poet united fucking Rimbaud but the autre that je est is fucking you.' Ah've told yer, no more Greek...That's yer last warning! Ah'll boot yer fucking balls to Kingdom Come. They'll find yer cold on t'grave tomorrer morning. So don't speak Greek. Don't treat me like I'm dumb. 'I've done my bits of mindless aggro too not half a mile from where we're standing now.' Yeah, ah bet yer wrote a poem, yer wanker you! 'No, shut yer gob a while. Ah'll tell yer 'ow...' 'Herman Darewski's band played operetta with a wobbly soprano warbling. Just why I made my mind up that I'd got to get her with the fire hose I can't say, but I'll try. It wasn't just the singing angered me. At the same time half a crowd was jeering as the smooth Hugh Gaitskill, our MP, made promises the other half were cheering. What I hated in those high soprano ranges was uplift beyond all reason and control and in a world where you say nothing changes it seemed a sort of prick-tease of the soul. I tell you when I heard high notes that rose above Hugh Gaitskill's cool electioneering straight from the warbling throat right up my nose I had all your aggro in my jeering. And I hit the fire extinguisher ON knob and covered orchestra and audience with spray. I could run as fast as you then. A good job! They yelled 'damned vandal' after me that day...' And then yer saw the light and up 'eavy! And knew a man's not how much he can sup... Yer reward for growing up's this super-bevvy, a meths and champagne punch ini t'FA Cup. Ah've 'eard all that from old farts past their prime. 'ow now yer live wi' all yer once detested... Old farts with not much left'll give me time. Fuckers like that get folk like me arrested. Covet not thy neighbour's wife, thy neighbour's riches. Vicar and cop who say, to save our souls, Get thee beHind me, Satan, drop their breeches and get the Devil's dick right up their 'oles! It was more a working marriage that I'd meant, a blend of masculine and feminine. Ignoring me, he started looking, bent on some more aerosolling, for his tin. 'It was more a working marriage that I mean!' Fuck, and save mi soul, eh? That suits me. Then as if I'd egged him on to be obscene he added a middle slit to one daubed V. Don't talk to me of fucking representing the class yer were born into any more. Yer going to get 'urt and start resenting it's not poetry we need in this class war. Yer've given yerself toffee, cunt. Who needs yer fucking poufy words. Ah write mi own. Ah've got mi work on show all ovver Leeds like this UNITED 'ere on some sod's stone. 'OK!' (thinking I had him trapped) 'OK!' 'If you're so proud of it, then sign your name when next you're full of HARP and armed with spray, next time you take this short cut from the game.' He took the can, contemptuous, unhurried and cleared the nozzle and prepared to sign the UNITED sprayed where mam and dad were buried. He aerosolled his name. And it was mine. The boy footballers bawl Here Comes the Bride and drifting blossoms fall onto my head. One half of me's alive but one half died when the skin half sprayed my name among the dead. Half versus half, the enemies within the heart that can't be whole till they unite. As I stoop to grab the crushed HARP lager tin the day's already dusk, half dark, half light. That UNITED that I'd wished onto the nation or as reunion for dead parents soon recedes. The word's once more a mindless desecration by some HARPoholic yob supporting Leeds. Almost the time for ghosts I'd better scram. Though not given much to fears of spooky scaring I don't fancy an encounter with mi mam playing Hamlet with me for this swearing. Though I've a train to catch my step is slow. I walk on the grass and graves with wary tread over these subsidences, these shifts below the life of Leeds supported by the dead. Further underneath's that cavernous hollow that makes the gravestones lean towards the town. A matter of mere time and it will swallow this place of rest and all the resters down. I tell myself I've got, say, 30 years. At 75 this place will suit me fine. I've never feared the grave but what I fear's that great worked-out black hollow under mine. Not train departure time, and not Town Hall with the great white clock face I can see, coal, that began, with no man here at all, as 300 million-year-old plant debris. 5 kids still play at making blossoms fall and humming as they do Here Comes the Bride. They never seem to tire of their ball though I hear a woman's voice call one inside. 2 larking boys play bawdy bride and groom. 3 boys in Leeds strip la-la Lohengrin. I hear them as I go through growing gloom still years away from being skald or skin. The ground's carpeted with petals as I throw the aerosol, the HARP can, the cleared weeds on top of dad's dead daffodils, then go, with not one glance behind, away from Leeds. The bus to the station's still the No. 1 but goes by routes that I don't recognise. I look out for known landmarks as the sun reddens the swabs of cloud in darkening skies. Home, home, home, to my woman as the red darkens from a fresh blood to a dried. Home, home to my woman, home to bed where opposites seem sometimes unified. A pensioner in turban taps his stick along the pavement past the corner shop, that sells samosas now, not beer on tick, to the Kashmir Muslim Club that was the Co-op. House after house FOR SALE where we'd played cricket with white roses cut from flour-sacks on our caps, with stumps chalked on the coal-grate for our wicket, and every one bought now by 'coloured chaps', dad's most liberal label as he felt squeezed by the unfamiliar, and fear of foreign food and faces, when he smelt curry in the shop where he'd bought beer. And growing frailer, 'wobbly on his pins', the shops he felt familiar with withdrew which meant much longer tiring treks for tins that had a label on them that he knew. And as the shops that stocked his favourites receded whereas he'd fancied beans and popped next door, he found that four long treks a week were needed till he wondered what he bothered eating for. The supermarket made him feel embarrassed. Where people bought whole lambs for family freezers he bought baked beans from check-out girls too harassed to smile or swap a joke with sad old geezers. But when he bought his cigs he'd have a chat, his week's one conversation, truth to tell, but time also came and put a stop to that when old Wattsy got bought out by M. Patel. And there, 'Time like an ever rolling stream''s What I once trilled behind that boarded front. A 1000 ages made coal-bearing seams and even more the hand that sprayed this CUNT on both Methodist and C of E billboards once divided in their fight for local souls. Whichever house more truly was the Lord's both's pews are filled with cut-price toilet rolls. Home, home to my woman, never to return till sexton or survivor has to cram the bits of clinker scooped out of my urn down through the rose-roots to my dad and mam. Home, home to my woman, where the fire's lit these still chilly mid-May evenings, home to you, and perished vegetation from the pit escaping insubstantial up the flue. Listening to Lulu, in our hearth we burn, As we hear the high Cs rise in stereo, what was lush swamp club-moss and tree-fern at least 300 million years ago. Shilbottle cobbles, Alban Berg high D lifted from a source that bears your name, the one we hear decay, the one we see, the fern from the foetid forest, as brief flame. This world, with far too many people in, starts on the TV logo as a taw, then ping-pong, tennis, football; then one spin to show us all, then shots of the Gulf War. As the coal with reddish dust cools in the grate on the late-night national news we see police v. pickets at a coke-plant grate, old violence and old disunity. The map that's colour-coded Ulster/Eire's flashed on again as almost every night. Behind a tiny coffin with two bearers men in masks with arms show off their might. The day's last images recede to first a glow and then a ball that shrinks back to a blank screen. Turning to love, and sleep's oblivion, I know what the UNITED that the skin sprayed has to mean. Hanging my clothes up, from my parka hood may and apple petals, browned and creased, fall onto the carpet and bring back the flood of feelings their first falling had released. I hear like ghosts from all Leeds matches humming with one concerted voice the bride, the bride I feel united to, my bride is coming into the bedroom, naked, to my side. The ones we choose to love become our anchor when the hawser of the blood-tie's hacked, or frays. But a voice that scorns chorales is yelling: Wanker! It's the aerosolling skin I met today's. My alter ego wouldn't want to know it, His aerosol vocab would baulk at LOVE, the skin's UNITED underwrites the poet, the measures carved below the ones above. I doubt if 30 years of bleak Leeds weather and 30 falls of apple and of may will erode the UNITED binding us together. And now it's your decision: does it stay? Next millennium you'll have to search quite hard to find out where I'm buried but I'm near the grave of haberdasher Appleyard, the pile of HARPs, or some new neonned beer. Find Byron, Wordsworth, or turn left between one grave marked Broadbent, one marked Richardson. Bring some solution with you that can clean whatever new crude words have been sprayed on. If love of art, or love, gives you affront that the grave I'm in 's graffitied then, maybe, erase the more offensive FUCK and CUNT but leave, with the worn UNITED, one small v. Victory? For vast, slow, coal-creating forces that hew the body's seams to get the soul. Will earth run out of her 'diurnal courses' before repeating her creation of black coal? If, having come this far, somebody reads these verses, and he/she wants to understand, face this grave on Beeston Hill, your back to Leeds, and read the chiselled epitaph I've planned: Beneath your feet's a poet, then a pit. Poetry supporter, if you're here to find How poems can grow from (beat you to it!) SHIT find the beef, the beer, the bread, then look behind.
Adrian Mitchell – To Whom It May Concern Tell Me Lies about Vietnam
I was bowled over by the sheer power of this poem when I heard it read at the Royal Albert Hall. Very few poems capture that emotion.
War is a disease. So tell me lies about why we need to wage it. Tell me lies about the terrible people we need to fight. Tell me lies about the need to kill. Tell me lies about the horrors of these people. Tell me lies that there are no alternatives.
To Whom It May Concern
I was run over by the truth one day.
Ever since the accident I’ve walked this way
So stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
Heard the alarm clock screaming with pain,
Couldn’t find myself so I went back to sleep again
So fill my ears with silver
Stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
Every time I shut my eyes all I see is flames.
Made a marble phone book and I carved out all the names
So coat my eyes with butter
Fill my ears with silver
Stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
I smell something burning, hope it’s just my brains.
They’re only dropping peppermints and daisy-chains
So stuff my nose with garlic
Coat my eyes with butter
Fill my ears with silver
Stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
Where were you at the time of the crime?
Down by the Cenotaph drinking slime
So chain my tongue with whisky
Stuff my nose with garlic
Coat my eyes with butter
Fill my ears with silver
Stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
You put your bombers in, you put your conscience out,
You take the human being and you twist it all about
So scrub my skin with women
Chain my tongue with whisky
Stuff my nose with garlic
Coat my eyes with butter
Fill my ears with silver
Stick my legs in plaster
Tell me lies about Vietnam.
Adrian Mitchell
Wilfred Owen – Strange Meeting
I think this is my friend Rich’s favourite Wilfred Owen poem.
I was taken with the writing of a conscientious objector who wrote upon the wall in Richmond Castle, where he was incarcerated :
I have no quarrel with people from other countries. It is the men (and yes they are men) who seek power who create the hostility that creates war, who seek to impose their views, who seek to gain. It is those we should oppose. For it is the gullible who go forth in righteous fervour to perform the atrocities.
Strange Meeting
Wilfred Owen – The Sentry
Somehow the images of the First World War are the ones that grip my imagination when I think of war. Yet it comes in many forms. Right now it flares in the hot cities of Syria where the rain and sludge would be unheard of. It rages in Somalia, Iraq and Nigeria where men, inflamed with religious fervour are directed by unseen people intent on power and control.
Whatever the theatre the horrors are the same. There are no winners.
The Sentry
We’d found an old Boche dug-out, and he knew,
And gave us hell, for shell on frantic shell
Hammered on top, but never quite burst through.
Rain, guttering down in waterfalls of slime
Kept slush waist high, that rising hour by hour,
Choked up the steps too thick with clay to climb.
What murk of air remained stank old, and sour
With fumes of whizz-bangs, and the smell of men
Who’d lived there years, and left their curse in the den,
If not their corpses. . . .
There we herded from the blast
Of whizz-bangs, but one found our door at last.
Buffeting eyes and breath, snuffing the candles.
And thud! flump! thud! down the steep steps came thumping
And splashing in the flood, deluging muck —
The sentry’s body; then his rifle, handles
Of old Boche bombs, and mud in ruck on ruck.
We dredged him up, for killed, until he whined
“O sir, my eyes — I’m blind — I’m blind, I’m blind!”
Coaxing, I held a flame against his lids
And said if he could see the least blurred light
He was not blind; in time he’d get all right.
“I can’t,” he sobbed. Eyeballs, huge-bulged like squids
Watch my dreams still; but I forgot him there
In posting next for duty, and sending a scout
To beg a stretcher somewhere, and floundering about
To other posts under the shrieking air.
Those other wretches, how they bled and spewed,
And one who would have drowned himself for good, —
I try not to remember these things now.
Let dread hark back for one word only: how
Half-listening to that sentry’s moans and jumps,
And the wild chattering of his broken teeth,
Renewed most horribly whenever crumps
Pummelled the roof and slogged the air beneath —
Through the dense din, I say, we heard him shout
“I see your lights!” But ours had long died out.
