Kickings from my Sweetheart
By Michael Valentine
- 2299 reads
Kickings from my Sweetheart
Showgirls on the night-train
Share cherry-flavoured stories
About the bad old days in Holland
Eating tulip-bulbs for breakfast
Click-clack goes the Nautilus gear
On sale, goes the bric-a-brac and glitter-craft
As Sunday morning's sun-rise
Turns the spot-light on Saturday night's riff-raff
The pockets, turned out,
Of a man who loves the company of misery
And spends his evenings making promises
To showgirls on the night-train
About how he'll save them all from life
But you'll never wait so long
As the day you start expecting this life to start caring
About anything you think you deserve
I've had so many kickings from my sweetheart
That the bruises feel like lipstick traces
And if I follow them back sideways far enough
I can see faint evidence of love still imprinted on the dust
Alas, there are no happy endings
Because it all happens incrementally
For the Frenchman in the gutter on Union Square
And the Spaniard who earns his pay on the electric fiddle
The English cannon-fodder, the Irishman born for slaughter,
the Scottish communists daughter:
We're all born and die somewhere in the middle
Night-girls on the show-reel
Showcase the bow marks on their buttocks
And the caesarean scars on their stomachs
The archaic alchemy of defloriation
As the night-train pulls into the terminal station
A suit-case full of party dresses or hospital gowns
A memory of someone else's life in Havanna
I wish I could promise you that we'll go there one day
But you'll never wait so long
I've had so many kickings from my sweetheart
That the bruises feel like lipstick traces
And if I follow them back sideways far enough
I can see faint evidence of love still imprinted on the dust
- Log in to post comments
Comments
I like this. Opening stanza's
I like this. Opening stanza's rhythm sounds like a train on tracks. Is that intentionally worked or magic? I know, I know. Lots of relationship debris and the allusion of violence, hot on many well-cultured heels. Your subject(s) often feels eclectic - not random, eclectic - because there is always a chorus to pull it all together, some repetition, a guiding image. A messy love story here, a tragic one in fact yet worn like a dishevelled flesh badge with an unmistakable streak of wit.
- Log in to post comments
Sad, great imagery,
Sad, great imagery, fascinating tale...
- Log in to post comments
This is our Facebook and
This is our Facebook and Twitter pick of the day!
Get a fantastic reading recommendation every day.
- Log in to post comments
Lots of atmosphere in this.
Lots of atmosphere in this. Repetitions worked well. Interesting to read.
- Log in to post comments
yeh, great muse that moves
yeh, great muse that moves and a bit like the blues.
- Log in to post comments