Bonesack
By Ewan
- 1552 reads
Two-layer dressed
in a four-layer wind,
Maggie haunts the doorways.
No-one hangs coffee here,
‘Hanging’s too good for ‘em’.
Whoever 'them' might be.
There, but for the grace
of money and shelter,
go you and I.
Under the sightline,
never a headline
in the newspapers
down the trouser legs
and ripped puffa sleeves.
Have you noticed?
The last family-run
electrics shop in
Anytown
has no TV
in the window.
Maggie has.
Part-time police
move her on,
politeness itself,
minus eye-contact.
It’s the doorway
at B & M tonight.
‘Maggie carries the bones
of her parents in her sack,’
the children whisper as
they pass not one, but
two, bone-sacks.
*More about 'Four Feet Under' and Tamsen Courteney here
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Comments
Wonderful photos in that link
Wonderful photos in that link too - thank you Ewan.
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I was going to cut and paste
I was going to cut and paste a favourite verse but there kept being more, nothing not sharp enough to hold a cross together. Last night on bbc world service Assignment was about people in California who sleep on the Night Bus, they call it Motel 22. The unlucky ones can't afford the bus fare. Even though if California was a country it would be the 5th richest in the world because of the tech companies. This is a great poem, should be read a LOT
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Pick of the Day!
An important, sad and angry poem - this is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day. Please do share it round, and do follow the links to information about the book.
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Some nice wordplay, Ewan. Or
Some nice wordplay, Ewan. Or word association, maybe. It creates a flow, maybe a disruption that suits the situation. Tripping over itself. So it ought to, given its role as mirror to us all. I try to catch people's eye or say hello. Not always easy. Not always foremost in my mind. Thanks for putting the link on.
Parson Thru
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It's an all too familiar
It's an all too familiar scene here in New York, Ewan. And that's part of the problem. It's so familiar that you forgoet there are actualy people behind those faces. Like Kevin we need to keep telling ourselves to pay attention. This should not be considered normal. Wonderful poem.
Rich
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