Friday 30 September 2016

MANCHESTER CHAOS

MANCHESTER CHAOS

It’s chaos in Manchester
At the moment
It’s been going on for weeks
As they tear up the streets
Everywhere

It’s absolute bedlam
At the moment
It has been for months
There’s roadworks
Everywhere

It’s completely horrific
At the moment
Two and a half hours to do
A seven-mile journey -
Ended up walking

It’s an utter nightmare
At the moment
The journey to Piccadilly
From the University
Every night

It’s just terrifying
At the moment
Without pavements
Hopping into the road
All the time

It’s totally ridiculous
At the moment
Yesterday I counted
Twenty-five buses
Stuck on Oxford Road

It’s chaos in Manchester
At the moment
It’s been going on forever
Twenty-five buses
Stuck on Oxford Road…!


Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016

Thursday 29 September 2016

THE LOST WORLDS OF JACK WARNER

THE LOST WORLDS OF JACK WARNER

I adore lost worlds
I seek out those unknowable
Places once so familiar
Now only found in memories,
Or the black & white
Of old Jack Warner films

Where he grows begonias
That he’ll never see flower
Despite a further twenty -
Or more - years on the telly
Cut down by Dirk Bogarde
Because “This thing’s real!”

The tingle-ingle-ing
Of the bells in black police cars
Tracking him to the dog track
Caught thanks to the
Tic-tac-toe-ing of the
More honourable villains

And the children playing
In the craters made by
The wartime bombs –
Or Jane Asher playing
With her dolly and pram
Next to a ship-packed Thames

Taking time out from being dead
Jack wears a natty trilby
In that one – being all
Down to Earth – Like
Professor Quatermass’s
Rocket which crashed

Bringing something back -
Poor Victor Carroon
Had an absorbing journey
Merging with a cactus
Melting faces – but not Jane’s
In a long-lost London

On grey Sunday afternoons
In those vast high-waisted trousers
Not like the villains on seventies
Cop shows from America
Wearing ties, loud checked
Sports Jackets and combovers

Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016 

POETS OF OLD

POETS OF OLD

I wonder if the poets of old
Woke in the night,
Their heads full of words
And scrabbled about seeking
A match for a candle,
Paper, pen and ink,
To record their night-time brilliance?

Was this as frustrating -
Do you think? - As waiting for
A hard-drive to boot up,
Or that long trek downstairs
In search of your
Notebook and pencil
Before the thought evaporates?



Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016

ENDED POSSIBILITIES

ENDED POSSIBILITIES

I got quite enthusiastic
For a while there
About the potential
For saving the whale
But then
No-one else did
So I stopped

I got quite passionate
For a while there
About the achievability
Of getting world peace
But then
No-one else did
So I stopped

I got quite stimulated
For a while there
About the opportunities
For real democracy
But then
No-one else did
So I stopped

I got quite animated
For a while there
About the plausibility
Of stopping suffering
But then
No-one else did
So I stopped

I got quite excited
For a while there
About the possibilities
Poetry offered
But then
No-one else did
So I stopped


Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016


Wednesday 28 September 2016

EINSTEINING

EINSTEINING

“The World War
After next
Will be fought
With bows and arrows”

“That’s my lad”
His Mam said
“He likes to
Think about things”

But I thought
I’d heard it before
Heinlein…? or
Asimov…? or Clarke…?

Shouldn’t have
Mentioned it though -
Proud parents
Need their pride

The next war
In our office
May be fought
In angry silence

Turned out
It was Einstein –
Though it’s only
Attributed

And possibly
Misquoted –
He talked of
“Sticks and stones”

Maybe he’d
Heard it somewhere?
Possibly from
This lad?

Time is relative
After all –
Maybe his thought
Came from the future?

Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016 

THE VIEW FROM SPRING BANK ARTS

THE VIEW FROM SPRING BANK ARTS

I’m stopping the car on Spring Bank
Journey paused, in morning commute
Clear views across the whole valley
A perfect point to stand and think

I waved a telephone at the sky
Image trapped, a moment frozen
Panoramic settings try taking it all in
A tough ask - spectacularly failing

The Tweet is faster than the brain
The car parked; a moment of awe
Dawn’s lightshow simply too complex
For mere text characters to convey

Sharing to the world I call the shot
“The View from Spring Bank Arts”
Sending the words out unchecked
In light-speed haste aimed to please all

Adding “Arts” is just a habit
A stone-set mental aberration
The mind’s leap of association
Total Ars gratia artis

The tweet is faster than the idea
The human struggles to keep up
Warm glows of eagerness to please
Overtaken by a momentous moment

Inspired, the mind shifts further -
Tweet direct to Spring Bank Arts…!
They appear to have a web-life
Bright daylight might shine some joy

My head is full of Spring Banks
Pink brilliance is dancing off the glass
Send an image of their own building
Which it isn’t - it turns out

My brain’s confused the stonework
Art space is further down the street
It was the Adult Education Centre
Which filled my tiny plastic eye

The tweet is faster than the thought
Those windows on reflection
Despite my insistent recollection
Aren’t Spring Bank Arts at all


Martin A W Holmes, Sept 2016

FACE-TO-WHATEVER WITH YOUR NEIGHBOUR’S PANTS

FACE-TO-WHATEVER WITH YOUR NEIGHBOUR’S PANTS

Having communal gardens
There’s always a slight chance
Of finding yourself face-to-crotch
With your neighbour’s pants

It won’t happen very often
In fact hardly ever at all
But when we do our washing
We don’t hang out our smalls

They’ll be put onto a maiden
In the bathroom out of sight
Nobody needs my pants exposed
To the harsh glare of daylight

They borrowed a length of wash-line
One sunny Sunday afternoon
Whilst our own machine was running
Finishing its cycle far too soon

I headed outside laden
Under pant-filled wires I duck
When I had to limbo under it
I just didn’t know where to look

Hanging my sodden shirts out
Wires bending with the strain
Turning to dip in my peg bag
I‘m face-to crotch with pants again

I head back indoors shaken
My empty bag flaps in the breeze
Explaining my discomfort
Putting myself back at my ease

I look outside - they’ve vanished…!
It’s all now flapping clean bedclothes
We’ve avoided all that social angst
That keeps good neighbours on their toes

Though soon, when it starts raining
It almost comes as a relief
I dash up to bring the washing in ---
On the path she dropped her briefs…!


Martin A W Holmes, September 2016