Let's take a dive through my home estate, a place I've tried to escape since my first brainwave. I'll show you flat roofs and wayward avenues, shopping trolleys that become steeds at two in the morning next to mowed down greenery lying abandoned due to overuse. I used to deliver newspapers along this route. This spot, right here, has a great Wrekin view. Back in my youth, it reminded me of you - new roads, new horizons, new people to meet. Let's keep moving to the end of the street where a house is sent letters from the wicked government, asking a mother if she's recovered from her own ill head. Like her bed is four-poster when she can barely pay rent. Her pathway displays a name written in cement. Our descent continues with the drop-offs at Maccies. A clock towers over us while we're waiting for taxis to take us out of this place and onto higher plains with house party nights and endless summer days. But our dreams remain chained like bicycle frames, The keys are locked away, we pray in cars under stars, they say we can be anything we want to be. Such as royalty, or prime minister of this great country, if we work as hard as anyone who's born into money. So we hunt for hidden weaponry, hoping they see our cannon fire and where spirits only fade, there will one day be a parade.
Poem #1 from my collection 'A Shropshire Grad'. This poem describes some of my experiences growing up poor in the suburb of Donnington, Telford.