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#glasgow
he sings: all he wants is nothing more than to hear her knocking at his door. & all i want is nothing more than to be the one opening up my own. she walks through streets of calmed anxiety, a technique she has nailed into closed doors. tranced, coffee sipping, malamente listening; she lives in her mind for the hours she has to rest. the summer soars; the light winds are for whisking away the days til she returns. though today she practices for the worser days, she can’t help but realise these are more than okay.
0
Jul 10, 2019
Jul 10, 2019 at 12:25 PM UTC
all i want.
salt market; busy road; tracks everywhere; the pungent noise suffocates the air, the rain drenches my hair, & fills the trenches in the road. but… raised from the ground, such a haven from this world, lives clothed in serenity with flowers in its hair. surrounded by green leaves, hidden from the dirt, standing firm in its place; strong in its purpose. purpose? you may ask. home- where your loved ones gather in safe space & warm welcome. it is beautifully structured, yet free. it is a breath of fresh air.                                                                            ~ for home.
0
Apr 2, 2019
Apr 2, 2019 at 3:38 PM UTC
untitled.
As Big Tom soaks up morning sun Mathilda flirts with everyone Miss Kitty likes her milk from May While Sandra's Minnie 'gets her way' Youg Archie: bound to cause a stir And Hector: rarely did he purr But Flashy - he's much like our Son Big boy entrances everyone So on this morn - as felines trod Salute the cats of Westbank Quad!
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Oct 31, 2017
Oct 31, 2017 at 6:24 AM UTC
The Cats of WestBank Quad
There's a river That flows Through me and you It's current carries us Down stream A journey through Meandering kinks Enjoying the view And sometimes Rapids threaten to Cast us down But all the way through Our journey down river We can realise The currents run through us too They bind us and bless us As we travel together To the sea.
0
Oct 31, 2017
Oct 31, 2017 at 6:17 AM UTC
Untitled
Farewell Govan - bathed in a baking sun littered with betting shops and no win/no fee criminal lawyers and a myriad of pubs caked in years of libation steeped in history of industry and shipbuilding blackened smoked walls etched with gangland symbols: tooled-up local carnivores who ride shotgun on a BMX swapping discrete envelopes for indiscreet wads of cash. Farewell Govan - you fractured my ribs once in a moment of mistaken identity I didn't heed the advice to not walk through the park at night I didn't hear the pitter-patter of adolescent feet speeding my way in brand new trainers across the grass but I did feel the clunk of something solid on my head as the ground rushed up to meet me in a concrete embrace and watched as 4 bags of overladen shopping spewed out lying face up spread-eagle in Lilliput fashion and a mobile torch-app in my face with the repeating words “Ima tellin’ you man its naw him, its naw him” I reassured them frantically that I was definitely not him! as the hooded troupe picked up what was left of my shopping and even gifted me a couple of cans of super strength lager, a cube of dubious council estate hash and an usher to leave immediately (and think myself lucky). Farewell Govan - you got me blazing on cheap beer at the local pub which had recreated a holiday beach scene with a hand-written sign that read: Better than Ibiza! awash with carefree children and pit-bull terriers wearing bespoke Barbour dog jackets and brand spanking new Adidas white trainers purchased from Tam out of a nondescript blue plastic bag who always passes the day's pleasantries while topping up his pension chatting with auld Billy who was in the war (don’t you know) via the Merchant Navy and the version of how he was gunner on an oil boat in Vietnam via the umpteenth pint that afternoon. Farewell Govan - your late night shadows harbour an underlying tension masked with comic humour only if you can understand the lingo words that are distasteful anywhere else are in fact a term of endearment here I shall miss the odious vernacular and doth my cap to your spirit the Salt of the Earth and the Lifeblood of the Community with at least 40% proof liquids mixed with Irn Bru purchased at the 24/7 corner store along with a can of processed peas; one of your five a day. Farewell Govan - I go to the sunny side of the Clyde where it rains just as much but you don’t get mugged for carrying an umbrella or asked for the time from a watch-wearing tattooed sailor and joy-of-joys there will be actual fruit & veg shops where I don’t have to explain what fresh coriander is and what you use it for, other than on a pizza; I was offered dried bottled parsley instead. Farewell Govan.
0
Jun 3, 2013
Jun 3, 2013 at 10:43 AM UTC
Farewell Govan
Farewell Govan - bathed in a baking sun littered with betting shops and no win/no fee criminal lawyers and a myriad of pubs caked in years of libation steeped in history of industry and shipbuilding blackened smoked walls etched with gangland symbols: tooled-up local carnivores who ride shotgun on a BMX swapping discrete envelopes for indiscreet wads of cash. Farewell Govan - you fractured my ribs once in a moment of mistaken identity I didn't heed the advice to not walk through the park at night I didn't hear the pitter-patter of adolescent feet speeding my way in brand new trainers across the grass but I did feel the clunk of something solid on my head as the ground rushed up to meet me in a concrete embrace and watched as 4 bags of overladen shopping spewed out lying face up spread-eagle in Lilliput fashion and a mobile torch-app in my face with the repeating words “Ima tellin’ you man its naw him, its naw him” I reassured them frantically that I was definitely not him! as the hooded troupe picked up what was left of my shopping and even gifted me a couple of cans of super strength lager, a cube of dubious council estate hash and an usher to leave immediately (and think myself lucky). Farewell Govan - you got me blazing on cheap beer at the local pub which had recreated a holiday beach scene with a hand-written sign that read: Better than Ibiza! awash with carefree children and pit-bull terriers wearing bespoke Barbour dog jackets and brand spanking new Adidas white trainers purchased from Tam out of a nondescript blue plastic bag who always passes the day's pleasantries while topping up his pension chatting with auld Billy who was in the war (don’t you know) via the Merchant Navy and the version of how he was gunner on an oil boat in Vietnam via the umpteenth pint that afternoon. Farewell Govan - your late night shadows harbour an underlying tension masked with comic humour only if you can understand the lingo words that are distasteful anywhere else are in fact a term of endearment here I shall miss the odious vernacular and doth my cap to your spirit the Salt of the Earth and the Lifeblood of the Community with at least 40% proof liquids mixed with Irn Bru purchased at the 24/7 corner store along with a can of processed peas; one of your five a day. Farewell Govan - I go to the sunny side of the Clyde where it rains just as much but you don’t get mugged for carrying an umbrella or asked for the time from a watch-wearing tattooed sailor and joy-of-joys there will be actual fruit & veg shops where I don’t have to explain what fresh coriander is and what you use it for, other than on a pizza; I was offered dried bottled parsley instead. Farewell Govan.
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59
On this side of the bridge, Between time and eternity, A foothill to the Necropolis, Rises the cathedral. The remains of St. Kentigern Maintain it, the founding Father. The spire tops the cruciform Pointing the way to Glorify. Within, walls are embedded With plagues, standards and swords, Praising foreign campaigns And distant expeditions Of long lost brave hearts. Pilgrims stand silently; Tourists nod quietly, Pointing at remarkable achievements Of Empire, and the young, Beatified on distant lands. The fading banners protest: For this I gave my all, my best. The stones are cold, The windows stained: In the crypt, St. Mungo lies, The foundation of all That died.
0
Nov 7, 2015
Nov 7, 2015 at 10:50 AM UTC
Glasgow Cathedral
#1 | 31 Poems for August I want to do more than just write poetry. I want to paint pictures. So be my muse and surrender your body as my canvas. I’ll make every single swift stroke bring you to life. I’ll show you what this brush of mine is capable of. You are the sun that my sky yearns to hold. Beautiful cocoa butter skin. Your beauty is not only found on your exterior but every single place within. I want to insert my poems in every single atom in this galaxy. So that you can feel my love wherever you go. From Pretoria to Toronto. From Jo’burg to Moscow. From Cape Town to Glasgow. Static thoughts and kinetic conversations inspire my flow. I have thoughts that my words cannot describe and I wish to share them with the world. I wish to share them with you. I love the way your eyes see past my smile and deep into the fibres of my soul. I love the way your smile makes me whole. Let’s become a poem our friends can always snap their fingers to. I want to hold your body the way canvas portrays paint. I want to kiss your lips while I gently hold your waist. I want to do more than just write poetry. I want to tell the world about you. Let me tell the world about you.
0
Aug 1, 2015
Aug 1, 2015 at 10:24 AM UTC
Tell the World
Jim McDonnagh pulled his 2011 Ford Escape into his driveway, glancing over at his six year old son, who was sitting at the end of the drive. Angus McDonnagh, all of six years old, and ginger haired was waving at his dad, from a kitchen chair, set behind a card table. On the table was a sign and a box. Of course, from the angle Jim was at in the car, he couldn't see what was on the white board hanging in front of the table. Angus waved again, and turned back to the road. Jim, entered the large four bedroom bungalow from the side door, looking back at Angus one more time. Angus, was sitting, watching the cars drift by on the road in front. Carol McDonnagh, Jim's wife of nine years was at the front window watching out over Angus and his table. Jim came up behind her, and asked "What's himself doing out there at the table then?" "I think you'd best go ask him yourself" said Carol. She had a slight smile on her face. "No, what's up with him then....why the lemonade stand at the end of the driveway?". "It's not a lemonade stand...did you see any lemonade out there?" "Come to think of it, no I didn't...just wee Angus, and a box"..."What's in the box?" "Go and talk to your son"..."He'll let you know...and oh, we've a long distance call to Belgium going to be on the next bill". "OK....I'll....who do we know in Belgium?" "Questions, questions...go and talk to your son" Jim, went out the front door of the house, past Angus's bike in the walkway, where he always left it, and where Jim always told him not to leave it. Angus turned to see who was coming and then turned back to the road. "Hey son, what's up?" said Jim. "Your mum said I should ask you what you're doing out here". "Nothing Dad, just practicing...that's all", and he turned back to the road. "Just practicing..cool, ok I asked"....and Jim started away, turned on his heel and asked "Do you mind if I ask ...for what are ye practicing my lad?. "To be famous Dad, to be famous" said the ginger headed mite. "Oh, ok then....hold it....To be famous?"..."By sitting at the end of our driveway in the middle of Glasgow, you're going to be famous?". "Not now Dad, I'm practicing....but one day". "Oh alright, dinner's in half hour, see you then"...."Hold it....how is sitting at the end of our driveway, at a card table with a box....practicing to be famous?". "Easy Da...I'm selling autographs". "Autographs?" asked Jim. "Yep" said Angus. "And whose fine autographs are you selling my son, my son....you can't write your name yet....you can barely scrape by on the printing side of things too". "Their mine Da...mum did them on some kitchen cards for me. Their only one pound each. All famous people have autographs". Jim walked around to the front of the table, and looked at the box and the sign. Sure enough, one box full of about twenty white three by five recipe cards with Angus McDonnagh written on them, nice and sweet as could be. On the sign, "OTTO GRAFS" ONE QUID EECH!!!! Jim pondered his son's new and sudden career choice and asked "Angus...why do ye want to be famous?". "Because it's cool Dad. Everyone likes famous people". "I see..." said Jim. "Just a thought though son, don't you have to do something to become famous, to have people like you?". "That's why this is just practice" said Angus. Now, how do you argue with that logic? Up at the house Carol was looking out at her two men, one ready to be famous and the other confused as to why. "Dad, you like them footballers on telly, right?". "Yes son, I do....they're good at what they do". "And when you see them girls in the paper, without their shirts.....Cor' I'll have a bit of that...isn't that good. That means you like them too, right?". "Yes son, but...that's a different sort of thing". "How?...they're famous and people know them...are they good at what they do?" asked Angus. Flustered, Jim answered "yes they are son, yes they are". "What exactly do they do Dad?". "I'll tell you when you're ten son...wait until you're ten". "I'm gonna be famous like that footballer who's always in the news dad".... Jim thought about it...not sure who his wee boy was talking about.....and then it hit him. "You know dad, the one they always show on the news and the sports with that lady". "Son, that's John Terry, Englands Captain", said Jim. "He's the one, played for Chelsea too". "That's not what he's on telly for lately son, that's not the type of famous you want". "Why not?" "He's famous for doing something bad, that's not what you want...is it?". "So, I don't want to be like him, and I'm not ready to know about taking my shirt off...what can I be famous for Dad....I'm ready..I've got autographs done in the box". "I know son, you'll find out"....and hopefully soon thought Jim. "You can be like that Justin Barber lad from Canada....go on the internet and do stuff there, you can get famous from that son". "It's Bieber and nope, nope and nope" said Angus. "He has tattoos, likes girls and worst of all...he looks geeky". Jim laughed at the last bit. "But, he's famous...isn't that what you want?" "Supper!!!" Yelled Carol from the window. "It is, but not if I have to do that...I never thought being famous would be so tough". Jim thought, exactly why I avoided it son. He grabbed the box, and folded up the table, Angus was dragging the chair behind him...he dropped it by the bike and went in. Jim looked at it, dropped the table...took out a pound coin, dropped it in the box and went in for dinner. "Maybe I'll be a fireman instead " said Angus as they went inside. "People like them too...and it doesn't seem as hard as being famous"...."Yep, a fireman". Jim smiled, tousled his son's raggedy head and went to the table. "Now would someone tell me about this phone call to Belgium?....
0
Apr 27, 2013
Apr 27, 2013 at 7:32 PM UTC
Angus is Gonna Be Famous
Jim McDonnagh pulled his 2011 Ford Escape into his driveway, glancing over at his six year old son, who was sitting at the end of the drive. Angus McDonnagh, all of six years old, and ginger haired was waving at his dad, from a kitchen chair, set behind a card table. On the table was a sign and a box. Of course, from the angle Jim was at in the car, he couldn't see what was on the white board hanging in front of the table. Angus waved again, and turned back to the road. Jim, entered the large four bedroom bungalow from the side door, looking back at Angus one more time. Angus, was sitting, watching the cars drift by on the road in front. Carol McDonnagh, Jim's wife of nine years was at the front window watching out over Angus and his table. Jim came up behind her, and asked "What's himself doing out there at the table then?" "I think you'd best go ask him yourself" said Carol. She had a slight smile on her face. "No, what's up with him then....why the lemonade stand at the end of the driveway?". "It's not a lemonade stand...did you see any lemonade out there?" "Come to think of it, no I didn't...just wee Angus, and a box"..."What's in the box?" "Go and talk to your son"..."He'll let you know...and oh, we've a long distance call to Belgium going to be on the next bill". "OK....I'll....who do we know in Belgium?" "Questions, questions...go and talk to your son" Jim, went out the front door of the house, past Angus's bike in the walkway, where he always left it, and where Jim always told him not to leave it. Angus turned to see who was coming and then turned back to the road. "Hey son, what's up?" said Jim. "Your mum said I should ask you what you're doing out here". "Nothing Dad, just practicing...that's all", and he turned back to the road. "Just practicing..cool, ok I asked"....and Jim started away, turned on his heel and asked "Do you mind if I ask ...for what are ye practicing my lad?. "To be famous Dad, to be famous" said the ginger headed mite. "Oh, ok then....hold it....To be famous?"..."By sitting at the end of our driveway in the middle of Glasgow, you're going to be famous?". "Not now Dad, I'm practicing....but one day". "Oh alright, dinner's in half hour, see you then"...."Hold it....how is sitting at the end of our driveway, at a card table with a box....practicing to be famous?". "Easy Da...I'm selling autographs". "Autographs?" asked Jim. "Yep" said Angus. "And whose fine autographs are you selling my son, my son....you can't write your name yet....you can barely scrape by on the printing side of things too". "Their mine Da...mum did them on some kitchen cards for me. Their only one pound each. All famous people have autographs". Jim walked around to the front of the table, and looked at the box and the sign. Sure enough, one box full of about twenty white three by five recipe cards with Angus McDonnagh written on them, nice and sweet as could be. On the sign, "OTTO GRAFS" ONE QUID EECH!!!! Jim pondered his son's new and sudden career choice and asked "Angus...why do ye want to be famous?". "Because it's cool Dad. Everyone likes famous people". "I see..." said Jim. "Just a thought though son, don't you have to do something to become famous, to have people like you?". "That's why this is just practice" said Angus. Now, how do you argue with that logic? Up at the house Carol was looking out at her two men, one ready to be famous and the other confused as to why. "Dad, you like them footballers on telly, right?". "Yes son, I do....they're good at what they do". "And when you see them girls in the paper, without their shirts.....Cor' I'll have a bit of that...isn't that good. That means you like them too, right?". "Yes son, but...that's a different sort of thing". "How?...they're famous and people know them...are they good at what they do?" asked Angus. Flustered, Jim answered "yes they are son, yes they are". "What exactly do they do Dad?". "I'll tell you when you're ten son...wait until you're ten". "I'm gonna be famous like that footballer who's always in the news dad".... Jim thought about it...not sure who his wee boy was talking about.....and then it hit him. "You know dad, the one they always show on the news and the sports with that lady". "Son, that's John Terry, Englands Captain", said Jim. "He's the one, played for Chelsea too". "That's not what he's on telly for lately son, that's not the type of famous you want". "Why not?" "He's famous for doing something bad, that's not what you want...is it?". "So, I don't want to be like him, and I'm not ready to know about taking my shirt off...what can I be famous for Dad....I'm ready..I've got autographs done in the box". "I know son, you'll find out"....and hopefully soon thought Jim. "You can be like that Justin Barber lad from Canada....go on the internet and do stuff there, you can get famous from that son". "It's Bieber and nope, nope and nope" said Angus. "He has tattoos, likes girls and worst of all...he looks geeky". Jim laughed at the last bit. "But, he's famous...isn't that what you want?" "Supper!!!" Yelled Carol from the window. "It is, but not if I have to do that...I never thought being famous would be so tough". Jim thought, exactly why I avoided it son. He grabbed the box, and folded up the table, Angus was dragging the chair behind him...he dropped it by the bike and went in. Jim looked at it, dropped the table...took out a pound coin, dropped it in the box and went in for dinner. "Maybe I'll be a fireman instead " said Angus as they went inside. "People like them too...and it doesn't seem as hard as being famous"...."Yep, a fireman". Jim smiled, tousled his son's raggedy head and went to the table. "Now would someone tell me about this phone call to Belgium?....
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53
Can't believe what I'm seeing, All the flames and smoke, Sparks ignite expanding foam, Skyline begins to choke, Smoke is seen from miles around, Drifts across the M8 motorway, Drifting down Renfrew Street, Students stand and pray, Students were getting ready, Their talent ready to show The fire put a stop to that, Some talent just won't show, Built by Rennie Mackintosh, In the Art Nouveau design, A building of world renown, Some think of it a shrine, Building damage wasn't too bad, Fire and Rescue saved most, Student's art and Rennie's art, Didn't end up like burnt toast.
0
Jan 4, 2015
Jan 4, 2015 at 3:46 PM UTC
Glasgow School of Art