The Interview
By john_silver
- 1539 reads
The poet is sixteen
he carries a rucksack swollen
with anxious dreams one notebook
in which he jots candid
nonsense he does not watch TV
or mingle with the guys he
reads Keats Coleridge he listens
only to Classical music he
ponders calculates what
he will tell them
when they come to
interview him
The poet is twenty-one
he does not listen to the wiser
professors at uni he sleeps
with girls who study Law
drinks with the boys who
study Finance Chemistry writes
about all the deep existential stuff
writes essays about Ginsberg Dante
thinks confidently when they ask him
he'll aver that to be a great poet
you have to look into the
bleak core of things you know be raw
The poet is twenty-four
his father has leukaemia he
drops his job teaching
bored suburban high-school kids
he must go home when he
comes back his job's gone
like an Avril Lavigne boyfriend
it's no one's fault he's just
a fatality of the crisis he's
not sure what he'll
tell them at that
interview he will
figure it out
The poet is twenty-six
he moves to London finds
a room owned by some Indian
codger who juggles five
properties and hates black people
£420 a month for a desk
and a lumpy mattress that
gives him a bad back
leaves him to fend alone
against the heater on the blink
the crisis is still no-one's
fault so he stocks Christmas
toys for minimum wage recites
Neruda to African Bulgarian
Lithuanian colleagues who tell him
you should go to X Factor
he chortles well there's some
interview
The poet is twenty-nine
all the girls he used to sleep with
are now lawyers his friends corporate
analysts he sees Facebook photos in
Costa Rica in sunglasses he no
longer listens to Classical music
only to Fytch and The Living Tombstone
he writes freelance about expensive
cars tablets football other things he'll
never have his girlfriend is
a doe-eyed Brazilian immigrant when
she undresses he sees the scars
running both sides of her forearms
the story behind them was and still
is unknown nobody ever
interviewed her about it
never mind him
The poet is thirty-two
they wait for him outside his
flat knock him face-down
kick his stomach inside out
hold a knife to his neck
he misses out one week at
the windowless office where
he spends 11 hours of his day and is
still in probation he can't speak
in that state can't be
interviewed can't even
swallow food
The poet is thirty-six
he no longer believes in the
compassion of Christians
the reason of atheists the bunkum
of mayors the mission of
feminists the pages of
professors but comes back
on his birthday to
find his twenty-year-old
flatmate who does cocaine
wipes floors at Nando's
left him a donut with a candle
he goes to his room they eat
together there's no space
for interviews only their
small commensal confessions
The poet is fortysomething I don't know
he made it big now he's behind that desk
the fat lady from Faber says something
it's such a great privilege to have here etc.
they're looking at him he must be so chic
such envy the first to stand up and ask
a question is a kid of nineteen
who's read all of Larkin and Duffy
has his own notebook of bullshit and
he asks him What should I do?
and the poet leans forward
and is a hundred or a thousand
years old now maybe more
and he tells
them
Study Law while you can
and don't believe a word
that you find in the books
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Comments
Brilliant - I wish you'd post
Brilliantly bitter - I wish you'd post more!
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yeah, thought this was
yeah, thought this was outstanding.
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This is the first piece of
This is the first piece of yours I've read. Please post more. It's a cliche, but the words really do leap off the page.
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Love how you take the reader
Love how you take the reader through the different stages and thoughts of the poets life. Really engaging and thought provoking.
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This is our Facebook and
This is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Get a great readng recommendation every day
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Stunning piece. Managed to be
Stunning piece. Managed to be compelling throughout register changes which are excellently judged. I feel a poet in control throughout this piece.
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Hello Long John silver. what
Hello Long John silver. what an epic. What an absorbing read.
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