Monday 31 October 2016

KILLER CLOWNS

KILLER CLOWNS

The killer clowns are coming!
Killer clowns!
Killer clowns!
The killer clowns are coming!
Coming to get
You!

Somebody does a new thing
It gets liked
Liked a lot
Someone copies that old thing
Someone else does
Too!

The bandwagon is coming!
Bandwagon!
Bandwagon!
The bandwagon is coming!
Wants to involve
You!

Now everyone does the thing
It’s trending
It’s trending
So then telly drives the thing
Like that old thing’s
New!

The killer clowns are coming!
Killer clowns!
Killer clowns!
The killer clowns are coming!
Coming to scare
You!

No original thinking
Nothing new
Nothing new
Let’s just join in with the thing
Like all the rest
Do!

The killer clowns are coming!
Killer clowns!
Killer clowns!
The killer clowns are coming!
Coming to kill
You!


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016

HALLOW'S EVE THY NAME

HALLOW’S EVE THY NAME

It’s the time of year for hiding
In a cold, dark house
In case teeny, tiny
Protection racketeers
Come a-calling
Demanding tooth-rot

With menaces

MAWH, Oct 31 2016

HANDS-FREE

HANDS-FREE

The woman drives around the corner
Her hands gesticulating wildly
Fingers point and wave furiously
As she makes several salient points
To her invisible passenger
That or she must be on bluetooth

In using her hands so pointedly
She’s unaware of the irony
Of going hands-free in the first place
With all of her unseen grand gestures
Underscoring invisible points
To an unexpected audience

Either that or her unseen children
Are lurking hidden in the back seats
Although I prefer the first theory
As they’d be transparent and naked
How would an invisible person
Manage to get to work otherwise?

The woman in my rear-view mirror
Talks animatedly at her dashboard
Mouth flapping silently endlessly
Discussing the day’s new outrages
To an invisible listener
Furiously safe in her steel box

The man in the white van hurtles along
Heads in the opposite direction
So blatantly chatting and laughing
A hand-held phone clamped to his ear
The rest of the world invisible
As he speeds along the busy high street

Why would anyone choose to do this?
Especially when tonking along
At over thirty miles an hour
At the busiest time of the day
Oblivious to any dangers
The worst of which is simply himself

My grandfather did once advise me
That a should never ever forget
That a car is a lethal weapon
It’s the only piece of advice
From an otherwise forgettable life
That I can remember him giving

They were wise words nevertheless
After all, if I could have a near miss
With no music, no radio, no chat
On a bright clear summer’s afternoon
In my apparently invisible car
What hope do any pedestrians have?


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016

Sunday 30 October 2016

AUTUMN COLOUR

AUTUMN COLOUR

The milk white sky hangs around all day
Pale muted light softening the brightness
From burning embers of the dying season

Yet those colours are still calling to me
Hatted, booted, North Face coated head out
To capture colours conspicuously teasing

Burnt orange, blazing crimson, burning gold,
The snapper looking for autumn colour
Click-click-clicking in the woods

Leaves clinging on to life with a hint of rust
Defiant against gravity, gales and deluge
Transforming degenerating yet warmly pleasing

Lack of birds disturbs; Many heard but few seen
Hidden by branches still surprisingly green
The randomness of the change has no reason

Paler greens, muted chartreuse, shattered jade
The snapper looking for autumn colour
Click-click-clicking in the woods

The viewfinder catches worrying windows
With my innocent lens I fear drawn conclusions
Terror of the self-righteous needing appeasing

Met an old neighbour I’d not seen in a while
I frightened a horse - it frightened me right back
For a terrorised instant beating blood was freezing

Bright yellow, fading ochre, rusting brown,
The snapper looking for autumn colour
Click-click-clicking in the woods

The path paved with leaves, mud and water
Families with children and bikes leave their ruts
Look at me alone as if I’m committing treason

Dogs freed from leads can dump as they please
Out of eyeshot no wild-eyed witness picks it up
Squatting blatantly as their waste is squeezing

Burnt umber, filthy mocha, stinking brown,
The snapper looking for autumn colour
Shit-slick-slipping in the woods

Martin A W Holmes, October 2016 

MINT OR ANISEED

MINT OR ANISEED

Sunday morning supermarket
In the pharmaceutical aisle
Examining racked stacked bottles
An elderly gentleman pauses
Pores over indigestion medicine
As if it is the finest of wines

Saturday evening aftermaths
In the depths of darkest autumn
Sold in the largest priciest bottles
He rejects the “Double-Action”
Mulls over Mint or Aniseed
Lo-cost choice a sign of the times

Weekly shopping tornado
In the usual raging hurry
Swoops in to snatch his own bottle
Original Aniseed middle-sized
Wished they stocked the larger vessels
Needs more caution when he dines


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016

Saturday 29 October 2016

RED BULL NIGHTS

RED BULL NIGHTS

The notorious insomniac working a bar
Notices we’ve got in these new soft drinks
“These look exciting! What exactly are they?”
In such pretty cans looking pretty grown up

“Why don’t you try one?” She asks
“Okay, thanks, I’ll try a Red Bull”

The infamous insomniac facing a long shift
Finds the stuff in those cans is really quite tasty
The punters coming in with a long night ahead
Ordering their rounds before the curtain lifts

“And have one yourself” They say
“Oh thanks, I’ll have a Red Bull”

With a long lull in prospect before the first act
We’ve washed up and stacked up all the used glasses
It’s too early to set out interval refreshments
Time to indulge in a moment of peace

“So, what you drinking?” I’m asked
“Oh thanks, I’ll have a Red Bull”

Interval comes I’ve still not read the label
I’m oblivious to that high caffeine content
At half-time it’s swift rounds that they’re buying
Including their new mate, the guy serving them

“And have one yourself” He says
“Oh thanks, I’ll have a Red Bull”

After-show drinking is so very sociable
Especially on the last night of a show
Thanks to be given; awards being presented
I’ll be lucky if I’ll get home by two

“Do you want a drink?” She asks
“Oh thanks, I’ll have a Red Bull”

Cashing up, locking up, a long night nearly over
Need to sleep! Need to sleep! Got up so early!
Revving at the lights, heart palpitating wildly
Then staring at the ceiling the rest of the night

“God! What have I done?” I ask
Shouldn’t have had eight cans of Red Bull


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016

Friday 28 October 2016

CHEMISTRY LESSON

CHEMISTRY LESSON

On-screen chemistry
So hard to manufacture
Injecting diversity
Is really not the answer

It’s never easy
To find three random faces
Who also happen to gel
Enough to take tribes places

Viewers are fickle
They like what’s familiar
Mess with this at your peril
Watch your ratings drop so far

Favourites matter
They decide who to make stars
You may not like who they do
Even three white guys with cars

Don’t mess with line-ups
Respect their opinions
If their taste’s conservative
You’ll retain those millions


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016

Thursday 27 October 2016

MORNING DRAMAS

MORNING DRAMAS

On a deep black Thursday morning
Long before the day was dawning
There’s a crackling flicker of flame
Bursting from pitch dark horizons

A distant building was burning
The flickering shape of a church -
Perhaps a school - in orange bright
Dancing cutouts kept reforming

Far away burning mysteries
Make my morning commute slightly
Distracted and defocussed but
More dramatic than usual

By the time I could work out where
The flames that I could see leaping
From the hilltops might be raging
I was waiting at traffic lights

The fire engines were already
Overtaking – Blue lit, silent
Racing through enlightened morning
In unexpected directions

A sense of guilt nibbles away
Should I have dialed 999?
When others obviously had
To explain what I’d seen somewhere

I can't imagine that a call
Saying "There's a fire somewhere
Along a direct line between
Mellor and the city centre…”

“…Somewhere along those nine miles
A building is burning it seems!”
Would have helped the emergency
Services a great deal, though

I kept going – as did the flames
Far further away than I thought
Any call that I might have made
Would have been utterly useless

I sat in some traffic later
In Romiley - a huge orange
Light bursting over to my right
Beyond where the Cricket Club lies

Later I check social websites
“Romiley” and “Fire” I type
Misinformation abounding
Around old halls and paper mills

Four, six or seventeen tenders
Attending the great inferno
Firemen turning up everywhere
Beating off swooning girls with sticks

Turned out that the conflagration
Was a housing development
Near complete - now utterly gone
Happily the Old Hall still stands

Stories continue to smoulder
Arson incident suspected
Chimneys still have to be pulled down
Journo sorry she lacked make-up


Martin A W Holmes, October 2016