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Tuesday, 9 May 2017
Sunday, 16 April 2017
The Saddest Window In The World
Maybe you’ve seen it
Perhaps you only dreamed it
Walked past and given a shiver
An unintended quiver
For the saddest window in the world.
It’s really just four panes
In a boring, rough wood frame
It has little view; it faces a wall
In the thinnest alley of them all
It’s the saddest window in the world.
The sun has never ventured
Into the dark, dank centre
Of an alley full of muck
And garbage-stinking stuff
Below the saddest window in the world.
The glass is filthy too
Nobody ever looks through
The portal’s never opened
It’s crumbling, tired and broken
The saddest window in the whole world.
The room is now bricked up
There’s no-one to unblock
The concrete that surrounds it
The walls that grow around it
The forgotten window of the world.
Deep in the alley
Stirs a creature sadly.
The garbage starts to move and curl
But it’s not garbage. It’s a girl
Dressed in rags and shivering
Dreaming she’s not quivering
From cold and hunger night on night
From running, hiding, thieving, stealing
To try and grab another bite
A one whose life is riven
With harsh truths, unforgiven
Forgotten by the filthy world
No family that she knows of, or
A school, a home, a daddy
To hold her, or a mummy.
She is the saddest girl in the world.
She eats food that’s discarded
In bins. She is abandoned.
Her clothes are rags, held fast with grot.
She has no name aside ‘get out’
She is the saddest girl in the world.
There are no birthdays for her.
She hasn’t had cake, ever.
No blowing out of candlesticks:
She has never made a wish.
The saddest girl in the world
Doesn’t wonder anymore
Who lives and dies behind closed doors
Because she’s always hungry
And cold, and scared. She must be
The very saddest girl in the whole world.
She sits up in her garbage bed.
She puts her hands around her head.
Another day, another struggle
A thousand ways to get in trouble
For the saddest girl in the world.
But today she looks up; sees a window
To a room she could call her own.
It’s ten feet up. It looks so lovely
One day she’ll climb the walls and see
A way to open up a room
That maybe she could call her own.
And she would look out of the window,
See the garbage down below.
She says to herself: "Maybe today
I’ll find a ladder, find a way
And tonight – maybe tonight I can sleep
Without rats chewing at my feet
Without dark shadows looming large
Without the grimy seeping sludge
Maybe I’ll be safe, even warm.
I will be the happiest girl in the world.
It is the most beautiful window in the world."
Friday, 7 April 2017
The Great Five Pound Note Furore, And What Happened Next
Tallow in the fivers didn’t last so palm oil came in
instead. That wasn’t as stable, so the Royal Mint did a deal with Vietnam,
hybridising the paper with bahn da nem. That had a bit of a crackly feel in the
pocket, according to market research. Ascorbic acid, phenols and tocopherols
helped with the longevity of the new notes as did a gentle smoking process.
It
was found that rosemary was the most effective at this, which also gave the
fivers a lovely woodland aroma.
People started to collect them; the money made wallets and
houses smell more friendly. Banks were suddenly beset with tourists just
wanting to sit there and inhale the pleasing memory of late summer in the
forest. Pop-up fiver cafes started to appear in disused shops, where people
paid in coinage to drink awful coffee and factory floor-scraped tea and just
let their noses get away from the stress of the grimy streets, whilst
projections of childhood-memory playing in copses flittered and fluttered
across hastily-whitewashed walls.
The median cost for a 15 minute seat was £6, and waiting
times were measured in hours.
Greengrocers, in a kind of Ui-esque dip, could sell their
cauliflowers for a quid each, or four for one of the new fivers. There were
fewer and fewer in circulation, so in demand were the notes. People weren’t
getting rid of them; they were beautifully-scented and brought a sense of
permanence to any home. The power of the suggestion of the aroma of nature
seemed to wrest meaning away from the financial value of the notes, and put it
back into altogether more nebulous, but somehow more real, terrain. The cities,
in particular, could not get enough: people began to use them as modern
nosegays as they wandered the filthy, three-weekly-collection streets, stepping
over increasingly desperate nonfives without a second look.
By now, the upgraded five pound notes were changing hands
for ten pound coins or more.
When the plague hit, and the food went bad, and the imports’
costs soared, and the caulis cost a tenner a pop, the Mint added monosodium
glutamate to the notes. Aroma cafes added edible notes to their menus; the
taste was irresistible. For those who could afford it, breakfast would be five
pounds, lightly toasted, with irredescent GM-butter; lunch a five pounds soup
with irradiated Nu-water. The evening meal was usually cat. There were always
plenty of those; so quickly do pets become pests.
Most people didn’t have time or the inclination to wonder
what the moral of all this was, so it was just left on the side, a dollop of
indigestible fat amidst the fibre.
Thursday, 23 March 2017
Freak power motherfuckers
Imagine if Hunter or Jello had won:
What could they have really done?
Freak power, motherfuckers! Don't bogart the Jimson weed:
The world's turned out more fucked up than either did forsee.
Monday, 6 March 2017
The several disrespects of Carlton Wuck / Luckton Carr effects residual saviour: Part One
Carlton Wuck
Took for his sustenance bat faeces and the residue of wet
dreams
Neither hermit nor hobbit
He existed in tarclammed paper strewn and stewing behind a
disused garage
And that is the first disrespect of Carlton Wuck.
Carlton Wuck
Hid himself and his frame behind a chimney stack fallen from
a disused scout hut
Randy, ratty and ragged
He masturbated as he watched the stompy joy and angry
happiness of a protest march pass him by
And that is the second disrespect of Carlton Wuck.
Luckton Carr effects despond;
says that this fast and
Flying gas-mark,
grotesque roach of angriness happily stands: Boy, grumbly; her wrathfully. That
they, fatedly
Buggered and grotty,
shady
Twot-fought; abused
aplomb more than Brahimly. A reminder came: this, in itself, fed
Luckton Carr.
Luckton Carr effects this
worst: the instant and
Ravaged, misused and
maligned, accruing later bardamned in twistedly-
Shod, bitter,
permittedly-
seamless lassisitude. Our
man’s reasons can’t countenance this formbook:
Luckton Carr.
Logic
1. We have nothing. We are frustrated. Nobody listens to us.
2. It is not your fault.
1. Ah. That's good to know. So whose fault is it?
2. Theirs.
1. Theirs? Not yours?
2. No, don't be silly. How could you even think of asking that? It's Theirs. Look at them. They look different. They speak differently. Look at them. They are the ones. They did it all.
1. Did what, exactly?
2. It. It was them, it will be them and it always has been them. The future is at risk.
1. Yes. I see it. They must not come in.
2. Yes because They want/want to destroy what is Ours.
1. Yes. Yes! Stop them! How can we stop them?
2. You need to vote out. Then They can't tell you what to do any more.
1. Yes! Yes! Out! Out! Democracy!
2. Yes.
1. Are you absolutely sure it's not just, you know, a little bit, sort of, your fault?
2. No, don't be silly. How could you even think of asking that? It's Theirs. Look at them. They look different. They speak differently. Look at them. They are the ones. They did it all. You voted out. Democracy! They want/want to destroy what is Ours.
1. Yes! Out means out! Ours is ours! They want/want to destroy what is Ours! They want to take our jobs/cheat our benefits system! Out! Out! Out!
2. That's it. Democracy! The people have spoken.
2. It is not your fault.
1. Ah. That's good to know. So whose fault is it?
2. Theirs.
1. Theirs? Not yours?
2. No, don't be silly. How could you even think of asking that? It's Theirs. Look at them. They look different. They speak differently. Look at them. They are the ones. They did it all.
1. Did what, exactly?
2. It. It was them, it will be them and it always has been them. The future is at risk.
1. Yes. I see it. They must not come in.
2. Yes because They want/want to destroy what is Ours.
1. Yes. Yes! Stop them! How can we stop them?
2. You need to vote out. Then They can't tell you what to do any more.
1. Yes! Yes! Out! Out! Democracy!
2. Yes.
1. Are you absolutely sure it's not just, you know, a little bit, sort of, your fault?
2. No, don't be silly. How could you even think of asking that? It's Theirs. Look at them. They look different. They speak differently. Look at them. They are the ones. They did it all. You voted out. Democracy! They want/want to destroy what is Ours.
1. Yes! Out means out! Ours is ours! They want/want to destroy what is Ours! They want to take our jobs/cheat our benefits system! Out! Out! Out!
2. That's it. Democracy! The people have spoken.
Thursday, 9 February 2017
righter wrests
An arsonist. A narcissist. A fantasist. Infanticist.
Words in waves, worlds wave past.
A wrestler. A Westerner. An imager. Imaginer.
Whiles and wiles. Wails and Wales.
A spectacler. Spectacular. Bipolar and binocular.
Phrases pave. Praises pave least.
A spender. A suspender. A renderer. Incenderer.
Trials and tiles. Tails and tales.
A fighter. A frightener. A straightener. A shaper.
Living lies. Lying grave at last.
A converter. A comforter. A listener. A lessoner.
The righter writes. Rails and regales.
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