Sunday 30 January 2022

Whitewash

 Whitewash

Tories banned us
Everyone
From gathering
And having one
The party posh
Put us under the cosh
While they had nosh
It’s a whitewash
We couldn’t go
To a funeral
Except in numbers
Very small
The bumbling Slosh
With loads of dosh
Had a birthday mosh
It’s a whitewash
People died
In beds alone
Hospitals
Were a danger zone
Oh golly gosh
What a load of tosh
What a bish bash bosh
It’s a whitewash
Blatantly
They broke the rules
They surely took us
All for fools
It’s an Eton quash
A Cressida squash
A colourless splosh
It’s a whitewash
Yeah a whitewash
It’s no surprise
Big dog remains
In spite of lies
It’s eyewash
A Tory josh
A colossal Galosh
It’s a whitewash

 


 



Wednesday 26 January 2022

The hardest kid in the second year (October half term 1973)

The hardest kid in the second year (October half term 1973)
Back in the days of penny for the Guy;
An old tradition, from times obsolete;
Packets of Bensons and bangers we’d buy,
To smoke in the park and throw in the street;
And if a shopkeeper doubtful became,
We’d tell him a lie, give a false name;
Though scarce were the times, a sale was refused;
Corner shopkeepers rarely accused
Children of lying; the rule seemed to be,
As long as you told them, “They’re for my dad”,
You’d likely be served with no problems had,
And besides; there was no CCTV.
Basically, twelve year olds, told a white lie,
And corner shopkeepers turned a blind eye.
I had Leo Sayer type afro-hair;
I wore a tank top, a wide collared shirt,
Two-tone trousers, approaching threadbare,
Clumpy shoes that were starting to hurt,
A BHS Parka, I longed to outgrow,
And a knitted scarf that needed to go.
I wanted to be a fashionable peer,
But mum wouldn’t buy me outlandish gear;
Bowie haircuts were then all the rage;
He was at the peak of his Ziggy stage;
And glam-rock was the order of the day:
T Rex, Slade, David Bowie, The Sweet,
And my top-ten list would be incomplete
Minus Gary Glitter, I’m sorry to say;
None of us knew that he was a nonce,
Though, on reflection, he dressed like a ponce.
Such was the epoch in ‘seventy three,
As seen through the eyes of my pre-teen self;
Joining the EU meant nothing to me,
The IRA never damaged my health,
Power-cut threats bothered me not at all,
Miner's strikes are beyond my recall,
And anything else in that history,
Is as it was then; a mystery.
Thank God then for Wikipedia;
Indebted to it I am for this verse,
Which I’ve included for better or worse;
A miniature encyclopaedia,
Providing, I hope, a backdrop for you;
Albeit vague, in my twelve year old view.
But to return to the topic in hand:
It was a cold, autumnal break;
My friends and I had nothing planned,
Beyond mischief, performed for its own sake,
And on that fateful day on the estate,
There was Michael G, my very best mate,
Tony D, his older, brother, Gary,
Roy R, Larry D, yours truly; Barry;
And last but not least, there was Malcom T,
Whose presence that day, was no small thing,
For Malcom was nothing less than a king,
Gracing our humble assembly;
Him being known as someone to fear;
The hardest kid in the second year.
With no fireworks, and not much to do,
We loitered in the street for a while,
And Michael, combining bamboo with poo,
Surprised us with a random projectile,
Which he, via the end of the cane,
Sent flying toward a window pane
Where it landed with a comical thud,
Resulting in another piece of arse-mud
Landing on the window, already hit;
Hence, upon having found a new game;
We wandered, intent on more of the same;
The same, being christened “Flickashit”,
And many a flick that morning occurred;
The streets being paved with plenteous turd.
But, as all good things come to an end,
So it proved true on that fateful day;
In all the excitement, my dear friend,
Michael, boisterously carried away,
Gathered more excrement on a stick,
Anticipating another flick,
Too hastily turned, and as he rose,
The stick-end collided with Malcom’s nose,
And though Michael froze, still he let slip
A grin, and we were all grinning too,
But, evidently not sharing our view,
Malcom, with dog shit on his nose tip,
Looked at Michael, fair menacingly,
And coldly ordered him: “Get it off me”,
Upon which, Michael, in fear of the wroth,
Of Malcom fumbled around and found
A slightly damp looking, torn old cloth,
And, nobody uttered a word or sound,
As at arm’s length, he wiped Malcom clean,
Or at least till dog-shit couldn’t be seen,
And when he was done, silence still reigned;
The threat of retribution remained;
For after all, as already stated;
Malcom was the hardest kid in our year,
And he was made to look foolish here;
Hence, in anticipation, we waited,
For Malcom to make the crucial move
Of a twelve year old with something to prove.
Michael was never a pugilist,
(Until later, when he boxed in the ring),
But, luckily for him, there was a twist:
The hapless wasp was relieved of its sting,
By Tony D, with countenance grim,
Confronting Malcom and telling him;
“It was an accident, leave him alone”,
And as I watched, with an inward groan,
He offered Malcom out for a fight!
And what did Malcom say in reply?
Nothing at all, not even goodbye;
And he made a pretty pitiful sight,
Walking away like a beaten has-been,
Or a chastised dog, with his tail in-between.
Back in the days of penny for the Guy;
Long before being elderly blokes;
We were best friends, Michael G and I;
Partners in mischief and practical jokes;
Tony D too was a good friend of mine;
He’s since passed away, I heard on the vine;
And to him, and all the others above,
Whether dead or alive; I send my love;
Especially Malcolm; sound and okay;
At least he was when we were at school,
Approachable, cool, but never a fool,
Though events made him appear that way,
The day Tony D’s status was sown,
With not so much as a punch being thrown.

 

 

 

Thursday 20 January 2022

In The Name of God

 

In the name of the God

 

Poor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel

(AKA Big dog, Bob builder, BoJo,

Boris or Johnson), is not looking well;

Why doesn’t he in the name of God go?

Why’s he still here, in spite of the stories

Re drinking parties, inside number ten,

Attended by many high ranking Tories,

Seemingly flouting, again and again,

Rules implemented by Boris, no less;

Forbidding us all, on pain of a fine,

To hold like parties at any address,

Whilst he and his friends ate cheese and drank wine,

At what he described as a work event!

Yes, that’s what big dog would have us believe;

A party, he says, was not his intent,

And most especially not on the eve,

Of Prince Philip’s funeral, where the Queen,

In solitude, said her final goodbyes;

Oh how embarrassing must it have been,

When Johnson was forced to apologise?

Indeed, he apologised to us all;

He made a mistake and hopes we’ll forgive

Him and his party for not playing ball,

As Skypers mourned on a dead relative.

Why’s he still here? I can’t honestly say;

Though we’re assured, of Sue Gray’s inquiry,

There’s bound to be, at the end of the day,

More dismissal of Cumming’s diary;

And from the shit, right under our noses,

BoJo will come up, smelling of roses.

 

 

Tuesday 18 January 2022

Kauaʻi ʻōʻō (extinct)

 

Kauaʻi ʻōʻō (extinct)

 

Somewhere in Hawaii

The very last Kauai 

Sings the saddest song

I’ve ever heard

For a mate he’ll never find

And all that's left behind          

Is the haunting

Lamentation

Of a bird

 

Thursday 6 January 2022

Henry

 

Henry
Old Dyson, lacking in suction power,
Was decommissioned and driven away,
And all the debris he failed to devour,
Gathered, increasing with each passing day;
Vax, being Dyson’s upright replacement,
Was, by comparison, terribly poor:
Dog-hairs stood fast, defying displacement,
And many a time, I’d stare at the floor,
Pining for Dyson, who, whilst not perfect,
Far outperformed Vax, in his younger years,
But alas, we’d dumped him, and I suspect,
Or hope: all his tubes and internal gears
Have since been recycled; for all his faults,
He out-sucked Vax, in the living room waltz.
The hoover dilemma went on and on;
We saved and on Facebook, advertised Vax;
And now he’s finally, thankfully, gone;
Replaced by Henry, who sucks to the max!
Farewell dog-hairs; no more will you cover
Our floors, no matter how stubborn you are,
Henry is considerably tougher;
Sucks harder than Vax or Dyson, by far,
And my wife, being a romantic sort,
Saved up some more, for a well-earned reward;
Hence, a new partner for Henry she bought:
Pink, turbo-charged, with an extra-long chord:
Hetty by name (short for “Henrietta”);
I have to say; she sucks even better!