Tuesday, 30 April 2013
(Day 30) Final Poem
Just as you thought
The city had turned into cubes
And our lives had burnt themselves out
Into shadows dropping off the quays
You remember how things were different.
Remember Elm trees
Tied up high fences
Like prisoners of war
And limping trains passing
With open begging bowls.
Helicophers tracking your
Movements in the skies
And gateposts rattling in the wind
With the slight stench of petals
Twisting like kisses.
Thin palls of mist
Freezing the sunset
And choking the smoke
From the nearby factory
Until it stops,
Swirling in the past
Embracing what comes next.
(Thanks to all for reading. this poem is closure in more than one way.
While i will be glad of the rest, it has been great fun. I have uploaded the collection onto lulu should you wish to buy a hard copy of it - it is here http://www.lulu.com/shop/andy-n/30-poems-in-30-days-2013/paperback/product-20998224.html)
Monday, 29 April 2013
(Day 29) Subtle Escape
Yes, I have no further documents
of my past I can draw on.
No memories left in the ruins
Of my second school
Which almost caused me
A breakdown at 15
Or anything about being at
Youth training 18 months
later
Which managed that.
Nothing about working at
Macess
In Trafford Park
Or Easi Trim twenty yards up
the road
Both of which had me sweeping
Up the car park
During my first day.
Nothing about working in
Castlefield Art Gallery
After fleeding my first
scheme
After being beat up several
times
And frequently getting my
hours mixed up
Or Marks Menswear
Who got rid of me on my fourth
day
After incorrectly measuring
up a customer
And nearly choked him.
Nothing about eight and a
half years
At Great Universal at 2 jobs
I hated
And a year temping as a
kitchen porter
Here, there and anywhere
It becomes like a Jigsaw
puzzle
Where I actually worked,
Buried in a maddening kiss
So each place became as much
As a race
But a leap across high fences
A leap from page to page
Life to life
Burying myself constantly
In subtle escapes
From each place
Constantly re-inventing
myself.
(Day 29 was sadly wrote before the prompt for today came through which asked us to throw in bits of other languages into the pieces. I did actually try here but the piece told me to forget it and bits of my past instead came into it)
Sunday, 28 April 2013
(Day 28) Aborted Phone Call
I ring you in the usual way
But you drop the phone
When you hear my voice
Leaving me with nothing
But the droning ambience
Of an aborted call.
Perhaps you are still in bed
After a late, late night
I had forgotten you mentioning
You were going on drinking wine
And couldn’t be bothered
Staggering out of bed to
Answer the phone
Or maybe your cat
Has instead of missing
The dressing table
After jumping from your bed
Has jumped over the suite
Onto the window
And knocked the phone flying.
Perhaps it was a BT error
Or you are on the phone
To your mate, Steve
For one of your epic three hour calls
Which frequently has me thinking
What the hell you could talk about
For so long
And is meant to feel minor
When Steve says he sometimes
Talk to one of your ex’s all night long
Sometimes,
Or maybe your are rushing off
To the shop across the road
To pay your lottery ticket
Before rushing off to the doctors
Or Asda up the road before it closes
And couldn’t be bothered
Answering my call
At least then.
Either way it still hasn’t
Clouded my love for you.
but is a nice poem for my other half, Cathy)
(Day 27) Land's End
Over the cliff I can see
The sea choking itself
Before scattering itself
Over the rocks.
The sun jumping up and down
The tip of the horizon
And it’s rays
Drawing the waves in
Like mermaids
Would tease Sailors,
Twirling with broken rakes
And folding their arms
With a naked burst of sweat
Swaying across broken flowers
And dense, un-scattered sand,
Before bleeding countsleely
On the bay
In a blood soaked sunset.
Arrow driven
At land’s end.(Day 27 came about from a dream I had stood at Land's End near Cornwall
somewhere I had read about the previous day but alas had never been)
Friday, 26 April 2013
(Day 26) Skywriting
Skywriting across ripples of wood
And the brow of the hill
Over the horizons of the hotel
Into a review of the waves.
Skywriting across rainbows
Pretending to have fun
Blindfolded into a barrel of
Sniggering windswept giggles.
Skywriting with a ball point pen
Through pateroral scenes
Of short breaks
Before waving goodbye.
Skywriting through Cleverleys
Onto Fleetwood
And past the pensioners
Waiting outside our hotel.
Skywriting in forgotten whispers
With the stones of experiences
And ferries which remind
Tied up in my heart,
Facing the wrong way home.
(Day 26 is alas another Blackpool poem which came to light today
after watching the writing in this sky this morning)
Thursday, 25 April 2013
(Day 25) Questions without Answers
Maybe it was something
To do with the radio
Blasting out Quo then Robbie Wiliams
And the driver’s out of tune vocals
Dancing across the rain/
The two teenagers asleep at
Just outside the graveyard with the Smiths
Chattering in the rain
Or the tramp shuffling
On the doorstep of the travel lodge.
An now ex friend running late
To pick up her daughter from the childminders
Or the Policeman stood up the road
With a kehab dripping off his jacket
As he tells off a speeding driver.
Street lights turning grey
Then flashing blue
And pub doors clattering shut
Like old western saloon doors
In and out of the wind.
Movements weaving together
In the weather
Like a jigsaw
Before changing halfway completed
To a game of cluedo,
Before hurling themselves
Into the river
Like a cult finally giving up,
Movements stretched
skyward
With umbrellas and caps
Dancing in the heavens
Painted in red blue blood,
Leaving you with more questions
Than answers.
(Day 25 is a kinda the morning after poem after
The previous night with a jigsaw feeling like
A mood that morning as I was left with
A series of questions separated from answers)
(Day 24) Answers without Questions
Something about the hiss of the rain
And the sound of the taxi door
Stroking our umbrella
Before you empty it all over me.
Something about the moonlight
And the purple skies
Kissing like naked cousins
Drunk on raspberry cider.
Moments stitched together
Clothed in shades of emotion
And rattling shoes
Dripping in rain,
While the sound of the buzzer
Echoes down the hall
Before suddenly slamming shut
In the knife throwing breeze.
(Day 24 was wrote in the middle of still crippling back pain
after a lovely evening meal with my partner when getting out
of the taxi the weather outside looked like a series of
answers
without questions ).
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
(Day 23) Let's hope..
Let's hope Spring stays this year longer
Than a garbled afterthought.
Let's hope in this Spring
We are able to wander round the meadows
Near where I was born
And this Spring we are able to walk
Past the horses which always sigh at me
With a look at me you again?
Let's hope in this Spring
We are able to walk down past the river
Round the back of Guide Bridge station
Like we wanted to do last Summer
And got stopped at least three times
By the rain.
Let's hope in this Spring
We will be able to wear shorts
A bit more than we did last year
And this Spring
Neither of us get hit again
With Summer Flu
And don't pass it backwards
And forwards to each other
Like a warped game of tennis.
Let's hope in this Spring
We have a nice break away
And not in a hotel which
Looks like it should have put down
Thirty years ago
And the wind keeps trying to
Throw my hat into the ocean,
Before shifting back again
Into Winter in the middle of April.
(Day 23 as noted in Day 22 was also wrote in spiralling pain
And was originally going to be a earth poem but the reasonably
Nice weather produced this Spring like poem again instead).
Monday, 22 April 2013
(Day 22) Divorced Memories
I know you still miss
Those old rock t shirts
Which you used to parade
All over your back
Like steel tipped arrows.
Miss bouncing off the walls
Off the fishbowls
And off Big Mac Dave
When headbanging
To Nine Inch Nails's Closer
Even thou you are glad
You have now lost touch.
Know you still miss
Your hair down your back
And the way some of the kids
Used to call you a girl
Before smiling at you mother
When she complains
About your brother
Looking like a reject
From ZZ top.
Memories and music
Interspred in the past
Like lost countries
Divorced and sent
Into exile.
Divorced with
A special vitality
Scattered like leaves
Into dustbins
You see how it was,
And despite the regrets
You wouldn't change a thing.
(Day 22 sadly was wrote when ill with back problems and the pain brought backMemories of bad pain when headbanging in Rock World and
the poem became a elegy to a former self).
Sunday, 21 April 2013
(Day 21) In Flames
As I
gazed at the flames of the fire
I could
see your photograph burning
Until
I could hear it crackling
Like
a siren’s song in reverse.
I
could see your smile over and over
Until
it melted like cheese
Into
the ashes of the flames
And
the smell of that last kiss
Screamed
shut against the smoke.
(Was out today so missed the prompt so instead wrote this short piece
looking at a fire at my parent's house and this story which is fictional
sorta told itself)
Saturday, 20 April 2013
(Day 20) Anonymous Affair
Striped lights lay across
Purple open curtains
With fragmented train tickets
Tucked in the table
When you said you loved me.
Unlit sunrises
Blinking behind clouds
Like an anonymous affair
Gone haywire
When you said you loved me.
Lost in days adrift
Crossing concrete deserts
And words like train journeys
Instead of a steaming hot coach
When you said you loved me
(Day 20 happened as a kinda sequel to Day 19 which described
the leaving of a holiday. This is on the journey back home)
Friday, 19 April 2013
(Day 19) Leaving Blackpool
Leaving
Blackpool
All we could remember
Was the wind
Spitting in our face
To take it with us
Like a begging child.
Rarely the high street
With the shops swinging shut
Like ghosts
And the North Pier’s gates
In the wind
Despite the effort
Of the workmen.
Rarely the trams
Slipping on the tracks
And cars constantly
Doing at least 50
In a 30 mile zone.
Rarely the hotel
Which looked like the great wall
Of China
But had cracks in
The window,
Out of date wallpaper
And a cruise singer
That would have been
Too cheesy for Phoenix nights.
All we could remember
Was the half built Sainsburys
Outside the station
Lingering sketeal
Outside the station
Like a pack of cards
Half built into a house
But always
Always the wind
Wrestling for your attention
Reeking of dropped suncream
Over the horizon of a child’s hair
Which for a moment
Looks like seagull crap
Black on the moon’s face. (Day 19 I was still away on. This is reflections upon leaving Blackpool. I didn't see
the prompt that day)
Thursday, 18 April 2013
(Day 18) North Pier Storms
The sea calls me constantly
with watery blue eyes
and greying lines of separation
blindfolded into a barrel of
sniggering windswept giggles.
The sea calls me over and over
in forgotten, broken languahes
almost out of earshot
away from your loving arms
with a emphasis bordering on cruelty,
across dust over tracks
leading to the ferries
and pastoral scenes
collected in stained rain
before whispering goodbye,
leaving codes in the clouds
and tears on my collar
bordering on jealously,
skywriting in slow motion
with the early morning storms.
(Was away on Day 18 of Napwimo was don't know what the prompt was.
This however was wrote after a early morning walk in the rain near blackpool
north pier)
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
(Day 17) The day Nicolae Ceausescu died
Everybody was stood there
And waited in silence
In a nervous excitement
As they heard them both led outside
With their hands strapped
Firmly behind their backs.
Some had marched
From villages nobody had heard off
And others had been at Timisoara Square
Watching the tanks
Crunch across the pavements
Like splinters in oceans.
Some wanted to cheer afterwards
But were hushed quiet
By their superiors
And whispered to show respect
While others simply
Spat in the snow.
Some had experienced
The food rationing
And grew up with the blackouts
Accepting the suffering
For the ultimate good.
Hundreds had volunteered
And most barely
Kept a straight face
When the shots laced round the side
Colliding almost un-noticed
In the night breeze,
Buried in small change
Blood soaked in the drops
Of a rising snow storm,
A revolution whispered in the past,
A reality still tapping on the doors
Of lessons not yet learnt.
(This piece came inspired by Scott Walker's last album 'Bish Bosh'
which featured a song called ' the day the Conducator died.
Interested I chose to read up on Nicolae Ceausescu, who was
put to death in by all accounts a botched trial on Christmas Day
and this piece sort of told itself)
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
(Day 16) Silent
This time I chose to be silent
And look at life from inside
Instead of running into the headlights.
This time I chose to be silent
And listen to the church bells whistling
Instead of trying to pull them down.
Look at life from a different angle
And not jump to the wrong conclusions
And measure it out in a different voice.
And this time embrace the past
Instead of trying to kick it in the head
Like you would have once done.
Monday, 15 April 2013
(Day 15) The Other Side of the Gate
(First of all, on my main blogsite and write out loud, I have blogged
a poem about Hillsborough which was a football diaster which happened
in 1989 today or roundabouts. It is not a napwimo poem as it was wrote
at the end of last month but previously unpublished and wrote in
My poem today followed the prompt by Jo Bell who asked us to
write about our favourite place. This was going to be a school poem
as I walked past a old school this morning but the poem took a life
of it's own later.
Enjoy
Andy N)
On the other side of the gate
I can see you smiling
Like a window with a polished surface
As you whisper my name twice
Causing my glasses to steam up.
I can see you smiling
Like a window with a polished surface
As you whisper my name twice
Causing my glasses to steam up.
Once upon a time
I would have stood where you were
On the other side of the gate
Tracking footsteps every lunchtime
I would have stood where you were
On the other side of the gate
Tracking footsteps every lunchtime
Dropping my sandwiches
In the sandpit
In the sandpit
And trying to dig under
The school fences.
The school fences.
Once upon a time
I would have stood there
Tied up in moth like chains
I would have stood there
Tied up in moth like chains
Head locked in inter school fights
Across the football pitches
Across the football pitches
Numbed in broken illusions
And bullying class mates
On the other side of the gates
Before I flew away
Like a butterfly in full motion,
And bullying class mates
On the other side of the gates
Before I flew away
Like a butterfly in full motion,
Forever inside looking out.
Forever.
Sunday, 14 April 2013
(Day 14) Refugee from the past
Those hills that followed behind her
Followed her like a keyhole to a door
And the waves that kissed her feet
Reminded her of long dead cat.
The breeze turned blue
Before whistling like Superman
And the shadows started laughing
Sounding like a noir film.
The stars turned into bush fires
Before declaring wars with the sunrise
And the sand stuck to her hair
Like a refugee from the past
Screaming from the boats
Which droned past her in the distance
And the slight fog which disappeared
As she walked slowly into the waves,
Washing away her demons
Like a Spider cutting away
From it’s own web.
(Day 14 of NapoWriMo asked us to write in the voice of a superhero. I've done this before
in my first book 'Return to Kemptown' with a piece called 'Forgotten Hero' which can be seen here and while I considered writing another piece maybe in that series, this piece sort of took over
dealing with a very different kind of person)
Saturday, 13 April 2013
(Day 13) Old Address Book
I
still have your address book
And
sometimes sit there with it
Across
my knee
And
can feel the scribbles out
Of
those who died
Or
who simply you lost contact with.
Did
you cross off Ann from Clevelands
Who
you met on holiday in Southport
Back
when you were a child
Or
Barbara who was the daughter
Of
your old teacher from school.
Michelle
from across the road
From
your old house before you moved
Or
your cousin Flo from Cornwall
Who
my mother used to go on about
All
the time after I drenched her
With
a water pistol
Mis-taking
her for my sister.
Jude,
your best friend from Woolworths
Who
wouldn’t speak to you
For
two weeks after her husband
Came
onto you and she thought it was you
Or
Mags who went off to Australia
And
promised she would write every week.
Rose
who you went to I.T. Classes
Back
when you were 65
And
kicked out the wire after 10 minutes
Or
Jack your first boyfriend
Who
you almost married twice
Only
for it all to pieces at the last minute,
Memories
I can still remember you
Shaking
your head at sometimes
As
you sat there with a pen
Looking
every inch the writer
Instead
of a random crossword scribbler
As
your pen crosses out people
Like
threads pulled out of a jumper,
Threads
which you smile at
With
a quiet satisfication
As
you whisper goodbye again.
(Day 13 asked us to go out for a walk and see what came. This came from a conversation I held between two women when one of them mentioned her mother's old address book)
Friday, 12 April 2013
(Day 12) Early Love
Trees are doing a slow strip
Over a crescent moon
Fishing for an answer
Divorced from the crumpled apples,
And the leaves thrown in our face
In our old tree-house
Like gloves
And a love increasing
Before our eyes,
Turning the sky purple with envy
In the early morning sunrise. (I challenge you to “write a poem consisting entirely of things you’d like to say, but never would, to a parent, lover, sibling, child, teacher, roommate, best friend, mayor, president, corporate CEO, etc.” Honesty is the best policy, after all, so get it off your chest! .. I wrote a somewhat subtle poem in response but may return to this in more depth after)
Thursday, 11 April 2013
(Day 11) Three Legged Race
Arms tangled round each others waists,
They take a few steps in union
Before tumbling together
To the ground in a heap
With the grace of lovers
Rather than excited friends.
Arms covered in mud
But game enough to brush the sweat
Off their collars
Even though everybody
Is treating them like
A pair of stand up comics.
Game enough to keep smiling
Even after one of them pulls
The both of them down
Before the other does it in reverse
Until it gets to the stage
When others would have snapped,
Carry on laughing
Before them stopping
And throwing a look at me
As if to say don’t worry about us
And disappeared forever
From my eyesight.
(Day 11 asked from http://www.napowrimo.net/ asked for
a tanka. As I was having a bad day at work - I didn't get chance to think about it but instead wrote the above piece about a three legged race after over hearing a conversation in work)
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
(Day 10) Under the Duvet
You learnt from under your duvet
for the first time
how much I loved you.
You learnt when I had to pull
your cats apart
from fighting once again
in your kitchen
how much I loved you.
How much I loved you
when I poured cold water
over the tip of your shower
and when you moved my keya
so I ended up missing
my bus
the followng morning
and was around half a hour late
for work.
Love maybe a little blind
but revenge isn't.
(NaPoWriMo Day 10 asked for a un-love poem,
the oppositee of a love poem really. This is a cheeky
version of that rather than a serious one)
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
(Day 9) Noir Scene
For a few seconds he is outside
Next to where she waits
In the middle of the moonlight,
Two small figures over the riverside
Each step another turning
Towards moonlight
And an uneven texture.
For a few seconds he is outside
Tangled up in his footsteps
In a mystery of bleached hair
And bright red lipstick,
Peeling back her unknown promises
And her cigarette, which she tosses
Back into the river,
And with it the last remaining evidence
Of the crime they had just committed
In black and white.
(Day 9 of NaPoWrimo asked for a noir like poem.
One of my favourites of film so the poem was
great fun writing about)
Monday, 8 April 2013
(Day 8) Goodbye, Maggie Thatcher
Goodbye Maggie
Causing tragedy what was she
was good at.
Not making funny cups of
coffee
With floaters like walls
Or making molehills
Out of mountains.
Not creating wars
to keep themselves in power
to keep themselves in power
Or lining up bottles like
bullets
And missing the target every
time.
Not forging letters
Containing made up offences
Or causing riots
Over the poll tax
just for the hell of it.
just for the hell of it.
Causing tragedy what was she
was good at.
Tragedy was causing people
to live
Hand to mouth
On a stone’s throw.
Tragedy was the creation of
the miner’s strike
Through pig headed politics.
(See quotes like ‘we
had to fight the enemy
Without in the Falklands. We always have to be
aware of the
enemy within, which is much more difficult to
fight and
more dangerous to liberty' displaying her
attitude to the miners)
attitude to the miners)
Endless queues outside the
Job Centre.
Unemployment at 3 million.
Privatisation of state owned companies
and reducing the power
and influence of trade unions.
and reducing the power
and influence of trade unions.
The Moss Side Riots.
Causing tragedy what was she
was good at.
An Wall Street on masses.
An flag I now leave an
quarter drawn
on the edge of a darkness
that still threatens to swamp our country
even now.
that still threatens to swamp our country
even now.
(Sadly the prompt for Napwimio today got overtook by the news of the death of
Margaret Thatcher, ex british prime ministor. This is my tribute to her if that is the right word)
Sunday, 7 April 2013
(Day 7) - Sliding Doors
In another life,
We should meet on an airplane
And look at the world
From a different perspective.
We should hold hands
In a reflective circle
And kiss the clouds
Every time the sun breaks through.
We should laugh at the mistakes
We had made with our lives
And this time disappear
Into the headlights together
And this time never say goodbye.
(Day 7's prompt by NaPoWriMo hadn't arrived by this point of writing,
but the art of saying goodbye kinda made sense after seeing a poster of
the film 'Sliding Doors' and it started from there)
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