Tuesday, March 27, 2018

hibernating frog


I dug up a hibernating frog,
When I levered a buried paving stone,
Out of the ground,
Next to the pond.
I imagined that I was an archaeologist,
Or a grave robber,
As I cut away couch grass and weeds
And prised the slab onto its edge,
But as it hadn’t been buried that long,
The only treasures revealed,
Seemed to be worms and woodlice
Scurrying and writhing away
From the sudden unwelcome daylight.
Then I saw the little frog’s
Long legs kicking
As it hid in another crevice.
Sorry, amphibian pal,
To have so rudely woken you.
Spring’s on the way
But not quite all here yet,
So, catch some more kip,
Until the sun’s well up
And the swifts have returned.

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

ZOMBIE CAPITALIST DEATH HORROR


ZOMBIE CAPITALIST DEATH HORROR (© P.R.Murry 12/03/2017)
The dead bad giants
Are alive again,
Once my father believed
That they had been slain,
Or at least, battered
Down onto their knees;
And that Poverty, Ignorance,
Squalor and Disease
Could no longer crush us
With fear and grief;
But, sadly, that belief
Was overoptimistic.
And like something terrific and horrific,
The four zombified monsters
Are re-animated and undead,
Lumbering into a new century
Crushing those who cannot pay
Smashing all obstacles in their way,
Rewarding wealth and spurning need,
Driven by the power of greed
To ensure capitalism’s control
Of our bodies, our brains our souls.
So now we must dig a deeper hole
to bury them forever.



PERSONAL INDEPENDENCE PAYMENT INTERVIEW (A PARTLY FICTIONAL ACCOUNT)



A Nice Nurse knocked on my front door,
So I showed her up the stairs,
To my first floor flat.
I asked her to observe,
The difficulty that I have
In ascending to my abode,
For it is an overweight and arthritic old man,
Who writes this ode;
And coughs as he does so, remembering,
Forty years of heavy smoking
Plus decades more of breathing,
Polluted city air.
So I pant up the steps,
And sit, wheezing, in my chair,
As the Nice Nurse questions me.
She asks if I can wipe my own arse,
And how frequently I pee,
How I catch the bus or train,
And, how many pills I take,
And when I walk with my walking stick,
What progress do I make?
At the end of the interview, she explains
That in a month or so,
A verdict on my payment will be made,
It could be cut, it could be raised, it could even be doubled
Then she holds up a bucket and says:
“or just kick this now,
Save the government some money and trouble.”

Saturday, December 30, 2017

THE BLACK SHOULDERED KITE


The black shouldered kite
Shakes his silver pinioned wings
And does what he has to do
Which is hover,
Then change position,
Slip-slide, ride the wind
And hover again;
Like a feathered helicopter
Over this scrappy, scrubby field.
The black shouldered kite’s red eyes
Know no pity and see through concealments,
To detect the urine traces of
Scurrying mice and voles
Which better had, scurry like mad,
For now the black shouldered kite is god here
And god is not love,
But a grey feathered raptor,
Which wants its dinner
And will feast on saint or sinner.
It will fold its slender wings and drop,
To spear you on sharp-clawed talons,
Carry you to the top of a telegraph pole
And eviscerate you.
The black shouldered kite

Don’t take no shite.

VULTURES

In Spain at Monfrague
Three hundred vultures live on a crag.
I have seen them with my own eyes.
They have seen me and ignored me,
A fat man who gets out of a van and
Gapes up in awe.
Some sit on ledges,
Some perch on edges,
And let go, to fall,
Spreadwings and soar.
They may circle and glide,
Find a thermal to ride’
In spirals and gyres
Higher, higher and higher,
Silently curving, intersecting, interlacing
In a broad feathered dance in the sky
Over the Tagus gorge
Over the valleys and woods,
Up ever into pure azure

High above apes with their words.

COUSIN MARY


Cousin Mary strikes along the seafront at Seaford,
Walking into to the salt wind,
With her red hair streaming behind her.
She’s always dreaming,
So she’s dreaming again,
Of her Ireland of ancestors,
And the country of her heart,
Which is Spain.
She walks along the sea wall,
Past the Martello tower and the beach huts;
“NYAHHHHAYAHYAALLNEERAYHAY!” she shouts,
And then explains, when we ask her why,
That this was a Spanish muleteer’s cry.
Mary ate some mammoth once,
Unfrozen from Siberian ice, then cooked and sliced
At a Royal Geographical Society banquet.
Perhaps the flesh of the prehistoric pachyderm
Lets her access spatial and temporal dimensions,
Where others cannot be.
So there is Cousin Mary in a quiet English seaside town,
Calling out to other places and times,
There she is, we see her there,

But Cousin Mary is anywhere and everywhere.

SLEEPLESS


Sleepless in the airport hotel,
Where every molecule of air is tainted
By the aviation fuel that will fly me tomorrow,
Up high and far away
from the air conditioned box that
I have hired to have a throbbing headache in.

And the next night, I can’t sleep again
Although I’ve flown and travelled
To the extreme quiet of extreme Spain.
Being city bred,
I can sleep sound next to the sea,
Where ceaseless shushing waves soothe me into sleep,
Reminding me of the endless ebb and flow,
Of London traffic.
And if I wake to piss,
My anxious brain,
Does not let me sleep again
Without its usual background refrain
Of the sounds of more and more stuff
Moving from here to there,
Punctuated by sirens
And the rattle and hiss of nocturnal trains
Whereas out here on Iberian plains
I lay awake, waiting to hear
An eagle owl hoot

In the black black night.