Clothes for Friendless Men
By Angusfolklore
- 620 reads
These are the clothes for friendless men,
creased as their faces but beyond their grief,
these relics not venerated but on display and sale,
in all their crumpled gracelessness,
cast offs on a jumbled table,
telling their tale long after their wearers
had any need for clothing.
Nylon shirts and unravelled braces,
left objects and traces from a better dressed
generation that breathes no more.
Sharp creases in flannels that have survived
desitution and linger unloved
in backroom charity warehouse racks,
overcoats in standard issue British drab
half heartedly eaten by unspecified moths.
These clothes their only leftovers,
labels unreadable as Sanskrit,
fabric imprinted as profoundly as the Turin Shroud
for those who can read such things,
from days when even gravediggers
wore semi formal attire to do away with
their well togged brethern.
Trilbies delicate as fossilised dodo eggs
wait for heads no longer there,
destined to be undoffed for ever more.
What do we expect as we rummage through?
Smell of brilliantine or bay rum, a pawn ticket
or some mournful stain?
Or maybe a glass eye or unexpected tanner
in the lining of a Jermyn Street jacket,
or half dentures ready to chatter in the hand
of the unexpected finder.
Knitted cardigans, mustard grey,
reflective of long days lingering alone,
for it was always the way for most of these men,
who came and went, said little, left nothing
behind themselves otherwise,
and even the shadows of their homes
have been erased.
There may be a bespoke place in the shadow,
where the well-starched souls quiet wait
their winged tailor sitting cross legged,
in some unchanging other neighbourhood,
tending to the needs of friendless men
who have been and gone.
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Comments
Definitely reminds me of some
Definitely reminds me of some of the jumble sales I went to back in the 1970s...what bargins there were to be found.
I found these lines amusing:-
half dentures ready to chatter
in the hand of the unexpected finder.
It was a pleasure to read. Thankfully that never happened to me.
Jenny.
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wonderful lines in this poem,
wonderful lines in this poem, I liked very much
half heartedly eaten by unspecified moths
and
Trilbies delicate as fossilised dodo eggs
wait for heads no longer there,
destined to be undoffed for ever more.
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Lovely poem
Vivid, very sad, but I like the hint of something brighter at the end.
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There is so much great
There is so much great imagery in this, I really don't know where to start. Thanks for a very enjoyable read.
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