How weird I am here and you don’t know it. Sleeping they say, in a better place.
George on my right has been gone for years, even the flowers all brown gave up God knows when.
I wonder if you knew your neighbours before the batteries stopped. Did Edith know Agatha? Did Frank chat over the fence?
Chris was seventy-two, moved here mid-nineties when I couldn’t yet hold a pen. Now just a name on a slab of stone.
There’s a spot near a tree, no stone no dirt. I think ‘that’ll be fine, a place by myself.’ I shake my head. They’ll stick me somewhere else.
These aisles go on and on, one giant Tesco, nobody at the tills.
If you could speak, the stories I’d hear, the chapters spilling out like salt from a shaker. But you can’t talk and I can only walk past and wonder how you went.
Written: November 2013 and January 2014. Explanation: A poem written in my own time for a class at university - as such, it is likely to change slightly in the upcoming weeks. Fairly similar to an older piece, 'Best Before.' The title is taken from The Jam song of the same name.