Great Portland Street


Just as the Profumo newspapers

Were hitting the street

A young boy

In a blue van

Was being driven towards

The Post Office Tower

The van stopped suddenly

And the young boy

Banged his head

On the driving mirror

He decided not to die that day

He slumped back

Bloodied

Into the passenger seat

Dreaming of Hinton Twelvetrees

Teaching his class about

Gut Apples & Identical Power Houses

The young boy scrawled on his notebook

Red Brick is never sick
Blue Brick is my pick

Childish prattle (rattle) what a battle was his rhyme

As a punishment

For defacing his

Small Black Bible

He was made to sit next to the girl

With the long copper hair

That nobody liked

Her name was

Melissa Melissa

They were travelling towards Dover

But there were many trains

So they chose the train

With Credit Pollard

Written on the side

In light blue paint (still wet)

A main in a wheelchair was waiting

For his train on the opposite platform

He was not crippled

But had seen

God

And considered him to be his

Identical Hero

Next to him

Sat a woman in a turquoise scarf

Who was eating a Black Apple

The juice from the fruit

Had fallen onto

Her scarf

Staining the delicate material orange

The colour of the sunset

Cline Clasp Gas Fields Rich in Rape Passed Rapidly 

The day of violence had passed
Only the music remained

Tom Sixpence
Tom Sixpence

They sang as the night drew far close vose vose forever closed

Tom Sixpence always brought the rain that washed the new lichens

Off of the houses house passing

The elderly lichens were not touched as they had decayed

And had turned to Gold

At the age of fifty-five

The young boy

Leaned on a farm gate

And watched his birthday unfold

On the mirror opposite

Which had been nailed

On to a dead tree

By his predecessor

He took a pen knife

From his pocket

And carved

Si Sup Saradus
Epicuron Naradus

Into the rotted wood

For no other reason

Apart from the rhyme

He knew no-one would read it as they were only interested

In the reflections of the mirror

He picked up a stone and threw it at his aging self

The mirror shattered and was blown away

By a dust storm passing

The stump trees led to the church at the base of the hill

In the graveyard

There were forty-eight graves

Arranged in six tidy rows

Of eight

Of six

Arranged in eight tidy rows

There were forty-eight graves

In the graveyard

The stump trees led to the church at the base of the hill

The was not the geography of design

It had happened accidently

As the resting

Had died

At random times

The young boy and the girl with the copper hair

Hid behind the gravestones

For one minute each

Until the game was over

Twenty-four minutes

After it had started

He watched the people leave

The Rossetti Exhibition at the

NATGAL (as it was now called)

He counted them in fours (a Pythgoran number)

As they walked towards the Strand

He had reached the age of

One Hundred and Five without interruption

And was seated in a wheelchair (many years retired)

In Trafalgar Square

He was alone and had been so all day

Occasionally kind hearted people

Asked of his welfare

He eloquently explained

That he was not crippled

But had met God on many occasions

As the evening lengthened

It started to snow

Which surprised the young boy

As the month was July

Yellow petals had begun to descend

Symmetrical in shape

And vivid in colour

The young boy

Began to weep

As he knew he had died

And that his restless hand

Was now floating

In the vibrant waters of the fountain

 

 

 

  

 


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