Those frowned upon days would leave you unaware of us Us I think that if it hadn't been for the hustle and bustle of Saturday you would still be blindly stumbling around me And part of me still longs for that day You handing me a clay bowl you had crafted specially for me And I returning the favour by swearing the gesture would stayΒ Β in my heart forever I still remember the feel of the hard clay on my brittle fingers Clay of gods The clay of the unsilenced man who climbs through the bathroom window to feast on the partially digested moonlight That was us
I remember that day so well eighty seven green leeks sitting on the windowsill The ever changing planet earth That is where Saturday and I waited We we're both awake Awake But thoroughly unsatisfied Me and my grandfather We sat in the old field that we had finally forgiven eating partially grown corn Full on the cob But we would not eat it to the core For we were starving ourselves for evening supper Which meant Aunty Mason's famous Shepard's pie And the two of us sitting beside each other was enough For me and my grandfather had an unspoken bond We were each other
These were the days, might I add Before spaceships and the commercialised automobile When a lazy Saturday would be enough to fill our hearts with bliss And keep us going through the week Enough to last the millennium And Each single drop of ale we drank that day Would echo through our bodies that night And I would still cry About love dismissed from myself Which was, of course No big deal to the watching eye Not even a speck of light on a foggy night And They say to us that remaining sane is like elephant tusks Fierce and piercing we would cling to that idea like nothing else mattered And To be with you Recreating old memories Not thinking of meanings Meant the world to me
And there I was with my grandfather But years ahead he had died And I had replaced him with those good memories in that corn field I wish the same could be said for others The ones who I had sworn not to mention again Is it me creating this barrier? Is it the same one as you made with that clay bowl that day? Am I a mongrel, bison or bear? A monster or a demon? To shred up those memories Those seven neatly wrapped parcels you sent to my office in London Each containing another clay bowl That was enough That was enough Being back in your loop was too much of a sin An attempt to pierce my own armour Which I had sworn on the overcast morning of my grandfather's funeral I would avoid doing at all costs
And You were done and over The pinnacle of my sad memories How could I even think to look back? And I was older now At least to you I was Then there was that strange third fold The thought that you were still following my adventures I began to think that another day alive Would be enough to confuse you To lead you away But each stigma you had wrote was still attached to me Weighing me down I began to loose the desire to leave where I was
To the rest of them I was still nobody A manager of head office with lots of clay bowls on his desk Not somebody to love Love was for people who tried I had given up trying years ago In a bar in New York under red coloured lights Have I asked myself why? Of course I have But with each answer forty one more question are born God was playing a practical joke on me And with the end result The close of this chronicle Ended me For my last bud had blown And my last hair had turned white Yes That was me, all in all
Something different. An entirely fictional account of a fictional life. I have no idea how I feel about it, it just kind if fell out of my head onto paper. Comments appreciated!