In
By Ewan
- 283 reads
In the playground; tarmac covered,
yellow-lined for sports unplayed,
brutal for the knees’ skin.
“Ye’ve skinned yer knees!”
A taunt for a boy taking a shine
to a pig-tailed girl.
In the quadrangle: uni-formed,
blazer-armoured for trials by combat,
fatal for the self-esteem.
“Ye nah nowt, man!”
A thing the boy already knows
- in the big school, now.
In Stanhope Park: open-aired,
refuge from the common room,
smoking as a statement:
“You’ve read Pirsig?”
A book that wasn’t about riding
and fixing motorbikes.
In employment: vastly un-clued,
jacket-clad for office banter,
sharpened by disappointed years.
“Fetch the long weight!”
A joke brought from warehouse
to office unchanged.
In uniform, squarely-bashed,
razor-barbered for tidy combat,
something no-one expected.
“There are weapons!”
A lie with many consequences
for the blameless too.
In alleyways, shaking husks,
darkly bearded by time’s own grime -
there but for outragoeous fortune.
“I am a man,”
A cry for acknowledgement,
from life’s discards.
In the graveyards, long forgotten
former generals, flashy tombstoned -
dying for attention:
“Here lies Earl Haig.”
A worm-eaten hero, no more glorious
than a jumble of bones and soil
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Comments
yes schools were military-ised in the fifties and sixies
At least mine was.
interesting thoughts on dead "heros"
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