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jamie-mcgarry
English – Jamie McGarry was born in Norwich, in April 1988, and grew up in North Wales and Yorkshire. He attended university in Scarborough, earning a degree in English Literature and Culture, as well as founding a publishing label, VALLEY PRESS, in 2008. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this led to the release of several books by Jamie – including a novel, THE WAITING GAME, and three volumes of poetry, WHAT DO I KNOW ANYWAY?, AUTOPILOT and THE DEAD SNAIL DIARIES. He still lives in Scarborough, pursuing these bookish interests to his heart’s content. / / See also: www.valleypressuk.com | www.jamiemcgarry.com
Twenty years from now, where will we be? Perhaps you and your husband will have grown apart, but I know you’ll stay together for the kids. Perhaps he’ll even let you go out late some nights, in a short black dress and high-heeled shoes when you’ve kissed them all goodbye. He’ll know what you get up to – but he won’t care, and neither will you. And neither will I, ‘cause I won’t know. I’ll be in some little coastal house, writing my poems and ignoring the world. But I’ll probably look you up in the end. Will you even be alive? Will I stagger to the top of a hill, in the rain and on reaching the summit, stare in shock, at your grave? Will I fall to my knees, drenched to the skin, and reflect that, in the end I am the lucky one to still be living? Or maybe – just maybe, in twenty years time fate will have brought us back together. Maybe I’ll wake up every morning, and see your face. Maybe I’ll walk into the kitchen, and see you lounging in your pyjamas, with a big ‘good morning’ smile that you’ve been saving. Maybe we’ll get rid of our excess bread with regular trips to the pond, and we’ll laugh, as the ducks gather round us, like children to fight over what we have brought. (I would sell my soul for a chance to live in heaven.) I don’t live in the present, I dream of the future instead and the best thing about that is that it isn’t set yet. For now, it is all fiction – I am in control, I can make anything happen. But really, all I hope is that two decades down the line, your happiness will always be a little more than mine.
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Feb 19, 2011
Feb 19, 2011 at 3:27 PM UTC
Twenty
Twenty years from now, where will we be? Perhaps you and your husband will have grown apart, but I know you’ll stay together for the kids. Perhaps he’ll even let you go out late some nights, in a short black dress and high-heeled shoes when you’ve kissed them all goodbye. He’ll know what you get up to – but he won’t care, and neither will you. And neither will I, ‘cause I won’t know. I’ll be in some little coastal house, writing my poems and ignoring the world. But I’ll probably look you up in the end. Will you even be alive? Will I stagger to the top of a hill, in the rain and on reaching the summit, stare in shock, at your grave? Will I fall to my knees, drenched to the skin, and reflect that, in the end I am the lucky one to still be living? Or maybe – just maybe, in twenty years time fate will have brought us back together. Maybe I’ll wake up every morning, and see your face. Maybe I’ll walk into the kitchen, and see you lounging in your pyjamas, with a big ‘good morning’ smile that you’ve been saving. Maybe we’ll get rid of our excess bread with regular trips to the pond, and we’ll laugh, as the ducks gather round us, like children to fight over what we have brought. (I would sell my soul for a chance to live in heaven.) I don’t live in the present, I dream of the future instead and the best thing about that is that it isn’t set yet. For now, it is all fiction – I am in control, I can make anything happen. But really, all I hope is that two decades down the line, your happiness will always be a little more than mine.
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God made us brown so we'd be hard to spot upon his fertile soil, to hide from the birds...which he made as well... to cower, dodge, to postpone hell. But slug does not hide, or flinch back. His coat? Uncompromising BLACK. He turns defence into attack. Oh slug – oh glorious slug. God gave us shells to weigh us down. Without them, we would HURTLE round, so common sense suggests. Who'd beat us, across a distance of ten metres? But slug, dear slug, you have the grace to not rub freedom in our face, to slow your stride to match our pace. Oh slug – oh glorious slug. God made us quiet, thoughtful, wait. He taught us manners, and restraint. He taught us not to stay out late, we're model garden citizens. But slug, he DEAFENS when he speaks! He goes out seven nights a week! Beer-swilling, hard-living, party beast. Oh slug – oh glorious slug. I'd sell my soul to be like him. Vacate my shell, and dye my skin. I'd go twice weekly to the gym, if doing so would let me in to doors in town that say 'slugs only.' But slug accepts no fake, no phony. I'll love, but I will never be a slug – oh glorious slug.
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Jan 24, 2011
Jan 24, 2011 at 5:12 AM UTC
A Love Poem: From Snail to Slug
Has it been four days now? Must have been. Nearly a week since I did the deed. It was dark, and I was hurrying – I didn’t see his form, the path in front of me. My careless size-ten shoe came down, and crushed his hopes and dreams. My stride stopped mid-step. Sickened by that sound, the chilling crunch; I saw him, when I lifted up. A tragic mix of slime and shrapnel. And now – although you’ll doubt – I swear he’s back. I am the mollusc’s sole unfinished business on this fast and brutal Earth. You’ll say it’s in my head, if I report that I can hear his death in every mistimed gearshift, every mouth devouring crisps. But it’s not my conscience doing this, it’s him. He’s putting me through hell. I hear, with every step I take, the breaking of the tell-tale shell. Last night, I thought I saw him, bright and cold, in death. Slowly sliding next to me, and felt his tiny, ghostly breath. ‘It was dark!’ I scream. ‘I was hurrying!’ His silence says it all. But still, you don’t believe me? Come on round, see the trails across my walls... and explain the vengeful holes in my fridge-ridden, cellophaned lettuce.
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Jan 17, 2011
Jan 17, 2011 at 7:48 AM UTC
The Haunting of Poet by Snail