Winter, and with winter comes a girl. She greets the weather as a friend she has not seen since last Christmas, grins as the snow scrunches and squeaks as green Wellington boots on a wooden floor. Two men walk past her, reeking of yesterday’s brandy. One has sloshed a lot down his front, a dark claret patch like a seeping **** on his chest. Someone is playing an instrument, a saxophone, and the sound sprints fluidly along the streets into taxi-cabs and terracotta coffee-shop windows. She smiles again. One dustbin’s been KO’d, trash trips out in a puddle of colours like unwanted confectionary. A teenage couple are kissing, their heads a swaying metronome and the boy grips a Starbucks cup with one limp hand as if to say here you have it. Evening gushes over her like a rush of bad acne but she loves the sun as it pecks the cheeks of buildings and the jingle from her phone which reminds her, the movie starts at eight.
Written: August 2014. Explanation: A poem written in my own time that falls into my little sort of series regarding city landscapes and people. Looking at my recent work, I feel that the bulk of it is fairly strong, but this may be the one I am most satisfied with in the past month or so. The beach/sea series is ongoing and will return soon. Feedback on this, and all other city/beach poems, is most welcome and appreciated.