Showing posts with label Ballads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ballads. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 March 2016

Eurydice & Orpheus

I

Eurydice and Orpheus
are seated at the bar,
hands nested in each other’s palms,
and pupils knit like yarn.

Their lips are restless, wandering,
to soak the other’s cheek,
but disapproving glances force
them teasingly to leave.

She’d love to fuck him endlessly,
but it’s a weekday and it’s late.
They pull apart unwilling,
as his stiffy starts to chafe.

The morning after Orpheus
confides to his guitar.
He charts the agonies of love—
the trials of his poor heart.

He tries to frame Eurydice
in bland acoustic pop,
and clings to clichés carelessly.
He frets. Then sighs. Then stops.

The trouble is he cannot start
to praise her peerless mind,
when all his inspiration is
for wand’ring eyes to find;

and though the marriage of true minds
was always his ideal,
a bodiless and senseless love
is difficult to feel.


II

The next day brought a dinner date
and promised true romance.
They’d booked a table, called a cab—
not leaving things to chance.

The waiters hurried to their side.
The wine was flowing fast.
Their fellow diners grimaced at
Eurydice’s violent laugh.

Three courses later Orpheus
claims he must foot the bill.
They stumble out the restaurant
and stagger up the hill.

The bedroom beckons, Orpheus
swiftly fumbles at her clothes.
He grinds on her mechanically.
She tries to fake a moan.

When he comes she thinks, ‘thank God that’s done!’
and says she must go home.
It seems she’s drunker than she thought,
as she struggles with her clothes.

The morning after Orpheus
arises with a groan,
surprised to hear the troubled tones
of Jason on the phone.

A deafly silence clouds his ears.
His insides sink like lead.
‘I don’t know how to say this, mate,
Eurydice is dead.’


III

In the hours after Orpheus
is madly writing songs.
He tries to capture his despair,
served up three minutes long.

The neighbours shudder at the sound
of his caterwauling wail,
as sobbing for his sweetheart’s death,
he dreams of album sales.

The funeral comes and Orpheus
sings his love an epitaph.
The mourners grimly clench their teeth
and struggle not to laugh,

aside from someone at the back—
a woman in a veil.
She giggles softly to herself
at her boyfriend’s deafening wail.

Eurydice, see, faked her death—
life’s too short for bad sex.
He only loved her carnally,
but was a bloody bore in bed.

Besides, his songs were pretty shit—
he could hardly hit a note.
So she softly feels the purple marks
of Jason on her throat.

And Orpheus, that ghastly man,
was soon in love again.
Persephone craved his hellish shriek—
you can’t account for taste.

Saturday, 24 October 2015

The Parable of the Talents

'England is mine, and it owes me a living,'
-The Smiths

Joe totted up his net worth on
A dog-eared restaurant napkin.
His date was twenty minutes late
And he was hardly happy.

Joe totted up what he could give
To a vast indifferent world.
To woo uncaring multitudes
He totted up his worth.

And writing on the napkin’s right
In a cramped and nervous scrawl:
His virtues, talents, modest skills.
On the left his faults and flaws.

He started with the positive;
The things that he could do;
Like mediocre portraiture.
He used to play the flute.

But he quit karate needlessly
In a fit of childish rage.
The novel he was born to write
Never stretched beyond a page.

His French: no more than a bald Bonjour.
His verse was pretty bad.
He felt like the man who must multiply gold
But instead hid his charge in the sand.

His heart kept time in a sickly thump.
The sweat sprang from his skin
And left damp marks on the feeble start
Of his feeble offering.

He crunched the list in his clammy hand.
‘This isn’t all of me!’
‘But,’ said the absent place of his absent date,
‘This is all that I can see.’

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Boyhood

It started with substandard films
And Hollywood explosions.
Manhattan burned, we faced our doom
From comets, drones or Martians.

Guy Fawkes demands an audience
When he gives himself to flames.
And violence is a boy’s best friend
In bloody playground games.

When British Bulldogs led the chase
That scrapes the skin from knees.
When infant fists stroked supple skin
It felt like a release.

When we learnt about the birds and bees
The teacher looked so serious.
It terrified my childhood friend
Who asked if boys have periods.

When my crush whined grass was in her bra
I scrunched up summer leaves.
When she started dating my best friend
Milk teeth made chapped lips bleed.

Perhaps the joy when tissues burn
Wasn't worth the wasted dust.
And perhaps the half price shoot-‘em-ups
Were never right for us.

Still, flowers once were shattered seeds
And fractured eggs makes birds.
And silence must be broken with
Artillery of words.

What harm was there is throwing stones
At Spot, the neighbour’s cat?
And insects feel no pain when scorched
With a magnifying glass.

So you will feel no hurt when I
Visit your lips too roughly.
And when I step across that line
You’ll damn well cross it with me.

Saturday, 10 January 2015

Lloyd's Ballad

Lloyd syphoned off adrenaline
(Stale caffeine concoction)
And poured it into tea stained mugs
As urine coloured bourbon.

A face filled with anarchic glee:
George deftly chugging vod.
Tequila solemnly prepared
The body and the blood.

By this time Emily was pissed;
Videos were taken.
The wall propped her up grudgingly
Until it too lost patience.

A merry band (sans Emily)
Descended on the town.
They hugged and skipped and talked too loud
Feet pummelling the ground.

Inside the club the air was dense.;
The bar queue was ungodly.
The crowd was like a rolling tide
Endless waves of bodies.

Lloyd let the bass roar through his shoes.
He swayed with his eyes closed.
George leant and bellowed in his ear
Whilst treading on his toes.

Lloyd lost the others by the gents.
He peered into the throng.
And stared at strangers in the crowd
Who looked like they belonged.

The couples touched more than Lloyd did.
The lads were closer friends.
He cursed his dull and dreary life
And swore to make amends.

Outside the cold air bit his nose:
The cartilage carnivore!
He’d left his friends and sobered up.
He’d realised he’s a bore.

He dreaded the long anecdotes
They’d dwell on the next day
‘Cus none of them would feature him.
He trudged his lonely way.