Six a.m. and the morning leans To kiss the night; The streets are full of stars And sleepwalking business suits
The citrus woman With peroxide blonde hair And peroxide blonde fingers If she spoke I imagine it would sound Like lemon trees and smoke Her cigarette burns holes in the sky But when she passes me by She smells like the Boots Cosmetics Isle She paints the yellowed-ivory Of her finger-claws With crystallised orange To cover the nicotine stains And maybe I think I recognise My lemonade shampoo And tangerine hand wash Like a setting sun over Sicily
The beer can boy With stuffed up hair And a stuffed up liver He’s grey like a November playground Once all the children have grown And he’s hole-punched right through I might think he was heart-broken And trying to see how many other lost souls The bottoms of bottles hold If he wasn’t here every morning Lolling down the pavement Like a spring stretched too far Asking for a paper That I’m not allowed to give And trying to drown himself In the pooled rain under the streetlights
The coat-and-cardie bundle With wind-swept hair And wind-swept grimace Like a tornado tore up The geography of her personality And left it with just a bike and a death wish And those features heaped together Between chimney-tops and table tops For consolation Her feet on the pedals while her hair throttles Because she’s unlit Unseen, unprotected And she rides like this morning is the last As if she knows that skulls Crack like eggshells sometimes And handlebars are sometimes not in front of you.
If my Dad was here he’d see A smoker A drunk A dangerous cyclist But I see lemon zest and love hearts and black liquorish After all I’m at home Among these mistakes That the morning hours make