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martyn-thompson
martyn-thompson
English
la mano de mi abuela tiene las manos con la madre tierra la madre tierra necesita un alma para andar con en estos tiempos difíciles en estos tiempos difíciles mi abuela ofreció su alma la madre tierra no tiene mejor amiga para ayudar a su... en estos tiempos difíciles en estos tiempos difíciles
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:28 AM UTC
Mi Abuela
I live through music I am the rhythm I am the beat I am my heart-beat I am the vibration The sound that moves your soul The tones that colour the sky The tempo that guides the sun The moon and the stars Are in tune with me The wind and the rain Harmonise with me The earth Resonates with me Come by my side and join Me in my symphony For without music Life is nothing to me
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:27 AM UTC
I live through music
Hear the bass, grace notes race all over the place Cymbals paced, hi-hats chase, weaving between the bass The piano - chords struck with wide spanned hands Poly-rhythmic, multi-layered sounds in strands The timbre of reed vibrating against warm metal Precision; a sixth, a ninth and an eleventh interval A major, a minor scale; a frantic modal sweat A small sound for mankind; but a truly giant step Each note slices through the eclectic beat-drop Singing and whispering this post-modern be-bop Multi-phonics scream, like controlled feedback The seductive saxophone – this weapon of attack The boundary is stretched, new ground broken The holy saxophone has never thus spoken And I pay homage, all my deepest respects Go to the man who made those giant steps
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:25 AM UTC
Giant Steps - dedicated to John Coltrane
A warm glow radiates through the bones that are usually filled with aches and groans as I pass my place of birth. The street screams my name by day and whispers it softly when light has gone away smell the air, smell the warmth rising from the earth. The street entertainers of Portobello road the cool saxophone, the sweet notes blown the sound of a thousand footsteps. The jugglers, magicians and the market stands balancing, conjuring and selling their brands the warm breeze scatter their scent. Watch out for vagabonds and confidence tricks souvenir shops serving countless tourists the sound of a thousand tills ringing. Eat in any language, speak in any tongue dream of hustle and bustle and days long gone still you can hear the street singing. From Pembridge Road to Westbourne Grove these streets tell me that I am home they call me, repel me, thrill and destroy me. This land that did bear me keeps willing me back to walk it's streets and follow it's tracks this land is the place I must be... If I die, think only this of me, through every pane of glass, behind every windowsill there will always be a place called Notting Hill.
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:24 AM UTC
Breathe
There is a wondrous feeling of completeness When immersed in the act of … Cleaning a flute The soft light radiantly refracting from The slightly concave… Keys The shimmering of the shiny sleek skin A perfect nickel finish… It’s sexiness salute A strangely seductive serpent stealing My willpower; I submit to you… With ease The perfection of this harmonious union As my trembling hands caress… Your heavenly body Gently working away until my eyes are Illuminated by your brilliance… Your gleaming sheen Intoxicated, mesmerised by your lustre The warm ambience brings out… Your luminous beauty Ready now for my lips to blow a refrain A sweet tune is primed… The flute is now clean Let the melody begin…
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:22 AM UTC
Cleaning a Flute
None of my fingers are the same... Yet together they work the keys Of my saxophone To play melodies that raise Us to consciousness unknown None of my fingers are the same... Yet my two hands clap A beat so sweet or praise The good deeds that make The world a better place None of my fingers are the same... But they work in unison to caress To soothe, to bring pleasure Through my music and verse I give you harmony and joy None of my fingers are the same... This is no sound of a one finger snap Or the accusing point Of an angry single digit Though watch the ones pointing back My fingers bring harmony and joy They join with the fingers of others And share a loving bond so strong That no single finger can weaken None of us are the same....
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:18 AM UTC
None of my fingers are the same...
i - Introduction: ii - Lismore Park iii - The Road to Maidenhead iv - Town Square v - Contradiction, contraband vi - Saturday Afternoon vii - The Circus Comes to Town (Sunday) viii - The Show ix - The ringmaster x - The Fracas xi - An incident at Upton Park xii - No ball games xiii - New found… xiv - Nearly done xv - Another time… i - Introduction: Come friendly bombs you’ve still to hit The place whose name means quagmire The town, the place that’s left bereft Of soul, of spiritual fire. But hurry, hurry, please be fast For the crack dealer plies his trade With slight of hand and cunning A ghetto he’ll have made The peroxide perms have now all grown And muster outside shops To wait for the be-suited sales rep With his rocks and his alco-pops They’ve all spawned offspring of their own Fifteen-year-old cradle pushers Who sold their souls in return for hope To thirty year old cradle snatchers Come friendly bombs it’s plain to see The vacant, empty faces The lifeless eyes, the pallid skin The love that leaves no traces The love that lasts a knee trembling minute Outside Harry’s and Sluffs A love that smells of emptiness O they cannot get enough Come with me, look over there To the sculpture in the mall The stainless tree with it’s stainless birds And stainless birdsong call A bird sings and the town all stops To see from where this sound will show A bitter disappointment when learned It was played on the radio Community service on the airwaves To draw the crowd together A song played, a one hit wonder Reminds us nothing is forever The sterile radio station plays on Opiates to which we should yield And bare our souls and be grateful for The song of Bedingfield ii - Lismore Park The sight of a child playing in the street Is one of day’s gone bye But Lismore Park sees them out in droves Stealing cars and getting high The twelve year old sent out to play Whilst mother takes a knap But really she’s having it away For a fiver and a brown wrap The party at the house next door That never seems to stop The men all come and go and paw Girls in this knocking shop But halt weary traveller, stop! Come sit and rest your back The bench awaits you on the green And the deluded maniac The man who knows what’s wrong with you And how to make it better As long as he keeps his soul filled up With cheap White Lightening cider Six large cans for a five-pound note From the corner shop near the school An offer really not to be missed And to make the drunkards drool A songbird sits on the climbing frame And sings his cheerful tales A tune too much for our dear lush The maniac exhales The songbird sings and fills the air With a loving string of notes That reminds the sitters on the bench There may still be a hope A radio plays ‘that’ song again Should you dare to forget the rhythm The bird has flown away now Fed up with this hypnotism The airwaves are now filled with dross Thanks to the flat opposite the green The weary traveller moves on “Better days has this place seen” iii - The Road to Maidenhead O friendly bombs do try to miss The sweet blossom, the fragrant smell The flowers, the green grass of the parks The havens in this hell Be careful around the Jubilee River With it’s wildlife and sculpted hills For a walk in this very man-made place Will surely heal your ills But spare no mercy for the superstores That pollute and destroy our thoughts “If it’s not on the shelf, we haven’t got it…” The familiar assistants’ retort Take no prisoners with the office blocks That lay empty year after year For they clutter up the atmosphere And have no value here O friendly bombs, o friendly bombs The cabbages are all grown They read the Sun and sing along To the radio’s dreaded drone Whilst in their vans they speed on by Jumping all the lights To price a job – a small brick wall Based on a thousand nights The car showrooms… the car dealers Stack ‘em high and sell them cheap Chop-chop salesman, soften ‘em up The rewards are there to reap Finance, part exchange or cash Anyhow you like “No sir, not me sir… …I’d prefer to use my bike” The bustle of the weekend crowds The steamy traffic queues Stare too hard at that red car And suffer the abuse Overtake the blue one now And make him toot his horn See him raise his voice in anger To satisfy his scorn iv - Town Square Saturday morning, seven o’clock The town begins to wake A pair of sleeping winos Dream about their fate They plan their morning sermon But who will really care For what they say means nothing Less than their icy stare The busker and the balloon man Wait to take their turns To entertain and irritate And suffer being spurned By a thousand shady shoppers Who’ve heard it all before And probably given hard earned cash To make them play some more The trickster and the barra’ boys Set up all their stalls Selling mobile phone covers And fake branded hold-alls Adorn your phone with logos Hankies for a pound “Yes sir, we’re here on Sundays… …(Providing there’s no police around)” Grab a baked potato and sit And watch the folk go by Some will have you in hysterics Some will make you cry The man on his double-glazing stand In his suit and in his tie The perspiration on his head Watch him wilt and fry The songbird settles on the wall And sings to our delight A merry sonnet that will inspire Dreams we’ll have that night The wino shouts his sermon now The bird has paused his song This post-war sprawling Hooverville Muddles slowly along v - Contradiction, contraband On the steps of the library he screams aloud Through a mist of smuggled gin “You’re all fools, the lot of you is **** I’ve not committed sin…” “It’s not my fault I’m a lush… a drunk I don’t choose to live this life” “You’re all wrong in carrying on It’s you what’s caused my strife” In his wretched form he abuses the world Pooh-poohing this and that A skunk telling the world it stinks The polemic polecat “Society has robbed me of everything And left me less than whole” “The only day that’s good is Thursday When the postman brings me dole” On Friday he meets his dealer To fuel his pickled mind The man with the van on Saturday With the spirit and the wine By Monday, he’s all skint and broke The weekend has passed him by He takes his place on the library steps We shake our heads and sigh… Every week the same routine The same routine again Like clockwork his life ticks on by The suffering and the pain But he tells us it’s all our fault We’re the ones not right But it’s very easy for him to say The man who’s so contrite The children watch him puzzled It’s more than they can bear “It’s very rude…” their mothers say “To stand like that and stare” But what, do they expect their young To ignore this fool a mumbling? For they will see it for what it is A stormy weather warning vi - Saturday Afternoon I sit on a wall in Slough with friends Sharing the Dutch export Watching and laughing at the world And it’s variety of sorts A happy bond that we all share The joy of simple things Come friendly bombs and gather round Watch us while we sing The friendly bombs you call upon Are they straight off the shelf? It’s my belief, my firm belief The bomb is in yourself Ticking slowly by and by Just waiting for the code To trigger you and trip the switch To make the bomb explode We watch the people from where we sit The hellholes they’ve all made They don’t live they just exist on The edge of a razor blade Stop! Step back and take a look It’s not too late to change And become what you really want to be An icon of your age Over now to Langley Park To sit and bathe in the sun O friendly bombs please wait a while Until this day is done But what will tomorrow bring my friends? And will it come too late? Something that may save us all The bombs may have to wait A sedate sleepy Saturday Away from all the crowds Share a joke, a **** a smoke And laugh together loud The sun warms our sombre souls As on our backs we lie Staring as the clouds roll by United under the sky vii - The Circus Comes to Town (Sunday) Halt now, wait awhile please Stop the counting down Today the air is charged with joy The circus comes to town Must have arrived last night we think Under cover of dark And settled down and pitched it’s tents In the grounds of Upton Park The queue to purchase tickets Trails far along the road No. 53 offers cups of tea From outside her abode The crowds are mum, they say not a word As they wait their turns to go Inside the circus big-top tent And sit and watch the show We settle down and take our seats With an ice-cream and a coke But wait, where are the circus clowns? Is this some kind of joke? A wall of mirrors fades into view And puts us in a spin Reflecting all the bright lights The colours and the din The ringmaster enters, cracks his whip And hands out little slips “Everyone’s a winner” was On every body’s lips The clowns they all appear now With a modicum of fuss Hold on just a minute now! The clowns we see are us A spotlight points up to the gods At the top of the trapeze A giant money spider glides Down with greatest ease He touches each and everyone All paralysed with fear And hands out ten pound notes to all Then promptly disappears viii – The show A strongman strolls out slowly with A length of iron bar A leopard spotted leotard and Moustache sealed with tar He looks around the big top with A menace and a sneer Surveying all the audience He seeks a volunteer The white van man he raised his hand The tattoo on his arm Said this man must not be crossed To do so would mean harm The strongman bent the iron bar Across the van man’s back Then invited him to strike him down An unprovoked attack The van man clenched his hand and hit And hurt his mighty fist A statue of the strong man shattered Turning into mist The van man stood and stared in fear The mist it gathered round And carried out our hero driver He hardly made a sound No-one clapped we all just stared Our faces ghostly white The strongman re-appeared and looked for A second stooge that night No-one raised a hand in fact No-one said a thing The strongman shrugged and vanished… Empty was the ring A knife thrower was the next to appear And seek the help of one With nerves of solid steel and courage Secondly to none Down came a fallen woman Who said she had no fear A knife was thrown and pierced her skin Her right large ear-ringed ear ix – The ringmaster A second knife it struck her chest She didn’t seem to weep She didn’t seem to be in pain Although the knife was deep A third knife struck her arm and then A fourth it struck her head The knives that should be missing her Were hitting her instead Horrified the crowd looked on Without a fuss or row The woman now all full of blades Politely took her bow She then went back and took her seat And never said a word Not another word she said And not a word she heard A magician was the next to charm And thrill us with his tricks He pulled a rabbit from his hat Then sat it on some bricks He then threw watches at this beast That grew to a great size The rabbit caught them all and juggled Them to our surprise But here’s the rub when we all looked At places on our wrists No watches were there to be seen A cunning little twist The magician cracked a whip and put The rabbit in a stew Which vanished there before our eyes Vanished out of view The magician he announced that he Alone did have this plan To mystify and amaze us all With his clever hand Indeed he was the ringmaster That owned this circus troupe That terrified and petrified Our frightened little group x – The Fracas A swarm of bees engulf us now And cover us with honey The ringmaster cracks his whip again The bees all turn to money Then suddenly the fight begins As we grab this flying stash Filling up our purses now With the hard-grabbed cash The ringmaster, a clever man Calms us with his sigh “There’s plenty here for everyone …And more than meets the eye” Suddenly a flock of doves fly Sweetly through the air They then attack the baying crowds Pulling at their hair Then with a deafening bang, a crack A flash of burning light We all cascade towards the floor The circus out of sight Confused we all stare around Thinking it absurd This bizarre spectacle should vanish Gone without a word I look from face to face to face Whatever could this mean? We all are laughing nervously How stupid have we been? We talk about the day’s events We talk and talk some more A voice booms from out the sky “I’ve opened up the door” “I’ve brought you all together now To pander to your greed To watch you take from fellow man Deny him what he needs” I reach in to my pocket For the money I did place It reads “Admission: 1 adult To The Human Race” xi – An incident at Upton Park That week the local paper ran An exclusive full-page ad “Faland’s Travelling Circus Troupe” “The most fun ever had” But no review was there to read To tell of our event The strange encounter with this circus To which we all went The following Sunday we meet up In groups of three or four Since that incident in Upton Park The spectacle we can’t ignore No-one knows quite what it means I don’t think that we’ll ever Understand all that happened here That brought us all together Perhaps there is a deeper message Given on that day Faland may be telling us That we have lost our way He simply used us all as tools To illustrate our folly That had now become too serious A risk to things so jolly Every week now we all gather on This hallowed piece of land And this is very odd because Nobody makes the plan The idea comes to all of us A self-ignited spark And draws each of us in turn To meet in Upton Park We picnicked then we all played games Then talked about the rain We toasted our new friendships And vowed to meet again The bombs, the bombs they’ve all slowed down Compassion saved the day This newfound love we now all have Must surely pave the way xii - No ball games The joy did not take long to spread Across our grimy frowns And bring a little sunshine To lighten up this town Happiness is upon us now The whole of Slough-kind Depending on how you look at it And on your state of mind The lush upon the library steps The wino on the bench The Publican and Landlord The ***** serving ***** They all wear smiles and laugh a lot And speak of wondrous things A songbird perches on the fence And merrily she sings The children, o the children How they sing and dance Always being friendly In any circumstance They have no care for politics You’ll see it in their face They want to play with everyone Who’s in the human race Meanwhile back in Upton Park The townsfolk meet again But there’s no talk of horror Or suffering and pain Instead though how a monument Should be erected in our names And pulling down the signs That read ‘No Ball Games’ The bombs have all stopped ticking now And line up by the wall And every now and then they clang Just to remind us all If we get too complacent And don’t respect our friends We’re marking down the seconds To our bitter end xiii – New found… We shared our food and shared our tales Life stories we all told They made us laugh they made us cry Left us warm and cold The suffering we did speak of Helped us understand How fellowman and woman kind Dwelt in other lands We laughed at tales of folly And stories of the past Stories that we are in awe of Stories that will last For another thousand years or more And travel on the wind A gentle breeze that talks to us Thrilling to the end Gathering momentum Our stories travel far Picked up and told by new folk Under glowing stars They bring warmth and humanity Softened by the rain They travel back to each of us To be re-told again Who’d have thought this loving joy This beacon in the dark Would begin upon the grass Of hallowed Upton Park The greed has gone or mostly so Now happiness is here We’ve seen the light and now must spread Our messages of cheer Looking back it hardly seems We could have been that way Not caring if each other lived To see another day This new found near Utopia Must spread across the land And we must stand to offer all Our warm and guiding hand xiv – Nearly done The story is now almost told Of how a strange event Saved us from our selfish selves A message heaven sent With cunning tricks and sleight of hand The error of our ways Was written up in greasepaint Shining through the haze A strange di
0
Aug 22, 2011
Aug 22, 2011 at 9:14 AM UTC
Come Friendly Bombs
i - Introduction: ii - Lismore Park iii - The Road to Maidenhead iv - Town Square v - Contradiction, contraband vi - Saturday Afternoon vii - The Circus Comes to Town (Sunday) viii - The Show ix - The ringmaster x - The Fracas xi - An incident at Upton Park xii - No ball games xiii - New found… xiv - Nearly done xv - Another time… i - Introduction: Come friendly bombs you’ve still to hit The place whose name means quagmire The town, the place that’s left bereft Of soul, of spiritual fire. But hurry, hurry, please be fast For the crack dealer plies his trade With slight of hand and cunning A ghetto he’ll have made The peroxide perms have now all grown And muster outside shops To wait for the be-suited sales rep With his rocks and his alco-pops They’ve all spawned offspring of their own Fifteen-year-old cradle pushers Who sold their souls in return for hope To thirty year old cradle snatchers Come friendly bombs it’s plain to see The vacant, empty faces The lifeless eyes, the pallid skin The love that leaves no traces The love that lasts a knee trembling minute Outside Harry’s and Sluffs A love that smells of emptiness O they cannot get enough Come with me, look over there To the sculpture in the mall The stainless tree with it’s stainless birds And stainless birdsong call A bird sings and the town all stops To see from where this sound will show A bitter disappointment when learned It was played on the radio Community service on the airwaves To draw the crowd together A song played, a one hit wonder Reminds us nothing is forever The sterile radio station plays on Opiates to which we should yield And bare our souls and be grateful for The song of Bedingfield ii - Lismore Park The sight of a child playing in the street Is one of day’s gone bye But Lismore Park sees them out in droves Stealing cars and getting high The twelve year old sent out to play Whilst mother takes a knap But really she’s having it away For a fiver and a brown wrap The party at the house next door That never seems to stop The men all come and go and paw Girls in this knocking shop But halt weary traveller, stop! Come sit and rest your back The bench awaits you on the green And the deluded maniac The man who knows what’s wrong with you And how to make it better As long as he keeps his soul filled up With cheap White Lightening cider Six large cans for a five-pound note From the corner shop near the school An offer really not to be missed And to make the drunkards drool A songbird sits on the climbing frame And sings his cheerful tales A tune too much for our dear lush The maniac exhales The songbird sings and fills the air With a loving string of notes That reminds the sitters on the bench There may still be a hope A radio plays ‘that’ song again Should you dare to forget the rhythm The bird has flown away now Fed up with this hypnotism The airwaves are now filled with dross Thanks to the flat opposite the green The weary traveller moves on “Better days has this place seen” iii - The Road to Maidenhead O friendly bombs do try to miss The sweet blossom, the fragrant smell The flowers, the green grass of the parks The havens in this hell Be careful around the Jubilee River With it’s wildlife and sculpted hills For a walk in this very man-made place Will surely heal your ills But spare no mercy for the superstores That pollute and destroy our thoughts “If it’s not on the shelf, we haven’t got it…” The familiar assistants’ retort Take no prisoners with the office blocks That lay empty year after year For they clutter up the atmosphere And have no value here O friendly bombs, o friendly bombs The cabbages are all grown They read the Sun and sing along To the radio’s dreaded drone Whilst in their vans they speed on by Jumping all the lights To price a job – a small brick wall Based on a thousand nights The car showrooms… the car dealers Stack ‘em high and sell them cheap Chop-chop salesman, soften ‘em up The rewards are there to reap Finance, part exchange or cash Anyhow you like “No sir, not me sir… …I’d prefer to use my bike” The bustle of the weekend crowds The steamy traffic queues Stare too hard at that red car And suffer the abuse Overtake the blue one now And make him toot his horn See him raise his voice in anger To satisfy his scorn iv - Town Square Saturday morning, seven o’clock The town begins to wake A pair of sleeping winos Dream about their fate They plan their morning sermon But who will really care For what they say means nothing Less than their icy stare The busker and the balloon man Wait to take their turns To entertain and irritate And suffer being spurned By a thousand shady shoppers Who’ve heard it all before And probably given hard earned cash To make them play some more The trickster and the barra’ boys Set up all their stalls Selling mobile phone covers And fake branded hold-alls Adorn your phone with logos Hankies for a pound “Yes sir, we’re here on Sundays… …(Providing there’s no police around)” Grab a baked potato and sit And watch the folk go by Some will have you in hysterics Some will make you cry The man on his double-glazing stand In his suit and in his tie The perspiration on his head Watch him wilt and fry The songbird settles on the wall And sings to our delight A merry sonnet that will inspire Dreams we’ll have that night The wino shouts his sermon now The bird has paused his song This post-war sprawling Hooverville Muddles slowly along v - Contradiction, contraband On the steps of the library he screams aloud Through a mist of smuggled gin “You’re all fools, the lot of you is **** I’ve not committed sin…” “It’s not my fault I’m a lush… a drunk I don’t choose to live this life” “You’re all wrong in carrying on It’s you what’s caused my strife” In his wretched form he abuses the world Pooh-poohing this and that A skunk telling the world it stinks The polemic polecat “Society has robbed me of everything And left me less than whole” “The only day that’s good is Thursday When the postman brings me dole” On Friday he meets his dealer To fuel his pickled mind The man with the van on Saturday With the spirit and the wine By Monday, he’s all skint and broke The weekend has passed him by He takes his place on the library steps We shake our heads and sigh… Every week the same routine The same routine again Like clockwork his life ticks on by The suffering and the pain But he tells us it’s all our fault We’re the ones not right But it’s very easy for him to say The man who’s so contrite The children watch him puzzled It’s more than they can bear “It’s very rude…” their mothers say “To stand like that and stare” But what, do they expect their young To ignore this fool a mumbling? For they will see it for what it is A stormy weather warning vi - Saturday Afternoon I sit on a wall in Slough with friends Sharing the Dutch export Watching and laughing at the world And it’s variety of sorts A happy bond that we all share The joy of simple things Come friendly bombs and gather round Watch us while we sing The friendly bombs you call upon Are they straight off the shelf? It’s my belief, my firm belief The bomb is in yourself Ticking slowly by and by Just waiting for the code To trigger you and trip the switch To make the bomb explode We watch the people from where we sit The hellholes they’ve all made They don’t live they just exist on The edge of a razor blade Stop! Step back and take a look It’s not too late to change And become what you really want to be An icon of your age Over now to Langley Park To sit and bathe in the sun O friendly bombs please wait a while Until this day is done But what will tomorrow bring my friends? And will it come too late? Something that may save us all The bombs may have to wait A sedate sleepy Saturday Away from all the crowds Share a joke, a **** a smoke And laugh together loud The sun warms our sombre souls As on our backs we lie Staring as the clouds roll by United under the sky vii - The Circus Comes to Town (Sunday) Halt now, wait awhile please Stop the counting down Today the air is charged with joy The circus comes to town Must have arrived last night we think Under cover of dark And settled down and pitched it’s tents In the grounds of Upton Park The queue to purchase tickets Trails far along the road No. 53 offers cups of tea From outside her abode The crowds are mum, they say not a word As they wait their turns to go Inside the circus big-top tent And sit and watch the show We settle down and take our seats With an ice-cream and a coke But wait, where are the circus clowns? Is this some kind of joke? A wall of mirrors fades into view And puts us in a spin Reflecting all the bright lights The colours and the din The ringmaster enters, cracks his whip And hands out little slips “Everyone’s a winner” was On every body’s lips The clowns they all appear now With a modicum of fuss Hold on just a minute now! The clowns we see are us A spotlight points up to the gods At the top of the trapeze A giant money spider glides Down with greatest ease He touches each and everyone All paralysed with fear And hands out ten pound notes to all Then promptly disappears viii – The show A strongman strolls out slowly with A length of iron bar A leopard spotted leotard and Moustache sealed with tar He looks around the big top with A menace and a sneer Surveying all the audience He seeks a volunteer The white van man he raised his hand The tattoo on his arm Said this man must not be crossed To do so would mean harm The strongman bent the iron bar Across the van man’s back Then invited him to strike him down An unprovoked attack The van man clenched his hand and hit And hurt his mighty fist A statue of the strong man shattered Turning into mist The van man stood and stared in fear The mist it gathered round And carried out our hero driver He hardly made a sound No-one clapped we all just stared Our faces ghostly white The strongman re-appeared and looked for A second stooge that night No-one raised a hand in fact No-one said a thing The strongman shrugged and vanished… Empty was the ring A knife thrower was the next to appear And seek the help of one With nerves of solid steel and courage Secondly to none Down came a fallen woman Who said she had no fear A knife was thrown and pierced her skin Her right large ear-ringed ear ix – The ringmaster A second knife it struck her chest She didn’t seem to weep She didn’t seem to be in pain Although the knife was deep A third knife struck her arm and then A fourth it struck her head The knives that should be missing her Were hitting her instead Horrified the crowd looked on Without a fuss or row The woman now all full of blades Politely took her bow She then went back and took her seat And never said a word Not another word she said And not a word she heard A magician was the next to charm And thrill us with his tricks He pulled a rabbit from his hat Then sat it on some bricks He then threw watches at this beast That grew to a great size The rabbit caught them all and juggled Them to our surprise But here’s the rub when we all looked At places on our wrists No watches were there to be seen A cunning little twist The magician cracked a whip and put The rabbit in a stew Which vanished there before our eyes Vanished out of view The magician he announced that he Alone did have this plan To mystify and amaze us all With his clever hand Indeed he was the ringmaster That owned this circus troupe That terrified and petrified Our frightened little group x – The Fracas A swarm of bees engulf us now And cover us with honey The ringmaster cracks his whip again The bees all turn to money Then suddenly the fight begins As we grab this flying stash Filling up our purses now With the hard-grabbed cash The ringmaster, a clever man Calms us with his sigh “There’s plenty here for everyone …And more than meets the eye” Suddenly a flock of doves fly Sweetly through the air They then attack the baying crowds Pulling at their hair Then with a deafening bang, a crack A flash of burning light We all cascade towards the floor The circus out of sight Confused we all stare around Thinking it absurd This bizarre spectacle should vanish Gone without a word I look from face to face to face Whatever could this mean? We all are laughing nervously How stupid have we been? We talk about the day’s events We talk and talk some more A voice booms from out the sky “I’ve opened up the door” “I’ve brought you all together now To pander to your greed To watch you take from fellow man Deny him what he needs” I reach in to my pocket For the money I did place It reads “Admission: 1 adult To The Human Race” xi – An incident at Upton Park That week the local paper ran An exclusive full-page ad “Faland’s Travelling Circus Troupe” “The most fun ever had” But no review was there to read To tell of our event The strange encounter with this circus To which we all went The following Sunday we meet up In groups of three or four Since that incident in Upton Park The spectacle we can’t ignore No-one knows quite what it means I don’t think that we’ll ever Understand all that happened here That brought us all together Perhaps there is a deeper message Given on that day Faland may be telling us That we have lost our way He simply used us all as tools To illustrate our folly That had now become too serious A risk to things so jolly Every week now we all gather on This hallowed piece of land And this is very odd because Nobody makes the plan The idea comes to all of us A self-ignited spark And draws each of us in turn To meet in Upton Park We picnicked then we all played games Then talked about the rain We toasted our new friendships And vowed to meet again The bombs, the bombs they’ve all slowed down Compassion saved the day This newfound love we now all have Must surely pave the way xii - No ball games The joy did not take long to spread Across our grimy frowns And bring a little sunshine To lighten up this town Happiness is upon us now The whole of Slough-kind Depending on how you look at it And on your state of mind The lush upon the library steps The wino on the bench The Publican and Landlord The ***** serving ***** They all wear smiles and laugh a lot And speak of wondrous things A songbird perches on the fence And merrily she sings The children, o the children How they sing and dance Always being friendly In any circumstance They have no care for politics You’ll see it in their face They want to play with everyone Who’s in the human race Meanwhile back in Upton Park The townsfolk meet again But there’s no talk of horror Or suffering and pain Instead though how a monument Should be erected in our names And pulling down the signs That read ‘No Ball Games’ The bombs have all stopped ticking now And line up by the wall And every now and then they clang Just to remind us all If we get too complacent And don’t respect our friends We’re marking down the seconds To our bitter end xiii – New found… We shared our food and shared our tales Life stories we all told They made us laugh they made us cry Left us warm and cold The suffering we did speak of Helped us understand How fellowman and woman kind Dwelt in other lands We laughed at tales of folly And stories of the past Stories that we are in awe of Stories that will last For another thousand years or more And travel on the wind A gentle breeze that talks to us Thrilling to the end Gathering momentum Our stories travel far Picked up and told by new folk Under glowing stars They bring warmth and humanity Softened by the rain They travel back to each of us To be re-told again Who’d have thought this loving joy This beacon in the dark Would begin upon the grass Of hallowed Upton Park The greed has gone or mostly so Now happiness is here We’ve seen the light and now must spread Our messages of cheer Looking back it hardly seems We could have been that way Not caring if each other lived To see another day This new found near Utopia Must spread across the land And we must stand to offer all Our warm and guiding hand xiv – Nearly done The story is now almost told Of how a strange event Saved us from our selfish selves A message heaven sent With cunning tricks and sleight of hand The error of our ways Was written up in greasepaint Shining through the haze A strange di
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