Goodbye (for now).
1 Sep
Here lie the last words of somethingeveryday, 14.02.2010 – 01.09.2011.
More info soon.
1 Sep
Here lie the last words of somethingeveryday, 14.02.2010 – 01.09.2011.
More info soon.
31 Aug
Thanks to Max for this month – it has been fun! Sorry for all the haiku! You can probably tell I’ve been busy!
Okay – so the last poem:
The Ezra Pound Shop
after Steve Walling
A compass that will lead you only to water
with a preference to the Baltic Coast.
A pack of old cards already marked
from a decades hard gambling on the ships.
A box of old kippers that smoke themselves
before descending on the offy for cigs.
A book filled up with lurid illustrations
of paintings of landmarks by Cezanne.
The diary of a baritone
who longed to be a cello.
Every reward card you have never needed
because who in their heart could ever possibly pledge fidelity to a sandwich?
A do-it-yourself-stained-glass-window-kit
with several accessible illustrations.
The long way home after a bad night drinking
and no pairs of arms to fall into.
30 Aug
I send you a picnic on an isle of grass
somewhere in central london, a bell
from a church somewhere from childhood,
a swig of lukewarm beer.
I send you too the beach and your terriers
playing tug of war with the bladderwrack
as elsewhere an old man tugs at his beard
watching the sea for some answers.
And you could be that quiet man
sat on a bench with a book you’re not reading,
a bench with dedications on a high
lonesome hill. And still I see you crossing
the bridge at rush hour, watching the boats
as they get under weigh, not lost exactly,
but what?
29 Aug
There’s a point at which the shingle
succumbs to a path
that ropes in the winter light,
vague sand, a cold wind
and the distant lights of Thorpeness
like ships far out
28 Aug
These are the true caravans
we long to live in, taking up
the vague lorryloads of food,
books, the long groans of trucktalk
that make them the very depot
of journeys; motorways
grown tired with themselves. We spot them
through railings, among thickets,
solid and shuttered. From bridges
we see the guard with his cig
and his phone, thumbing through
each cold february with the regularity
of a padlock. Sometimes on business parks
we make islands of our feelings.
27 Aug
“Shipmate, have ye shipped
on that ship” spake the unhinged
prophet Elijah
23 Aug
The dog was beaten more than once
and nobody could say who applied
the final blow, who left him stretched
on the road like a vagrant’s rug
who left him, his breath staggered
the snow still falling, covering his fur
until the snow patrol came, with their plows
and their terrible terrible albums.