Into the valley of
the clones
10.15
on a Saturday night, I look like a monster but I feel all right.
Confused
and lost, I miss a turn, in through the out door - I never seem to learn.
The
casual sniggers ripple down the line where the cocktail peacocks wine and dine,
each
step we take may break our bones as we enter the valley of the clones.
Mouths
like cannons, like solders on parade, we felt just like the Light Brigade,
meaty
maulers meet your gaze and you know we gotta get outta this place.
Its
glitter and flash that flash the cash for lager, vino and liquid trash.
Shirts
and ties and social spies - she eyes his packet and thinks of size -
he
thinks of shape and size of breasts - she dreams of kids and pregnancy tests.
Aftershave
freezes and a hairpin drops, silence is golden as the jukebox stops,
their
clothes disintegrate at a touch. Erase them all, the big, the butch,
plastic
hairstyle, nightclub unknown: we saw it all in the valley of the clone.
We
took a step and drew a breath, hesitation glued the air,
in
silence all we did was stare. A burp broke cover, then a fart.
I
felt the tension in my heart. Unwanted there, they made it plain -
we
must never, ever go there again. HATE across the left hand,
LOVE
across the right, T. REX is alive and well - don’t touch him or he’ll bite.
It’s
Man at C&A and woman at W.C. and the enemy’s at six o’clock,
the
enemy is ME!
‘Can
you tell me where the toilet is?’ I gently ask a face.
‘Six
foot under – where you’ll be’, it makes my heartbeat race.
‘You
get out, punk and you get out now ‘coz you’re the limit to what we’ll allow.
You
get out, punk or we’ll bring you down!’
Treated
like a stranger in my own home town!
Anger
to the left of me, carnage to the right, kicked into Sunday on a busy Saturday
night.
Eyes
stab our backs as we hit the cool street, so glad to be free of the valley’s
heat.
We’d
seen them fly the sticks and stones where dinosaurs die in the valley of the
clones,
where
men are men with arms like logs and bitching women fight like dogs
and
I’d only gone in to use the bogs.
So
the price of a piss can lead you amiss know your town and deal with this
- carved up into tribal zones the good, the bad, the ugly and the valley
of the clones.
-
The Ticket Inspector
My name is Harold Everyman, in my
shirt and tie and hat,
you wouldn't think to look at me I was such an obnoxious . . . person,
but obnoxious to you is honest to me and the lot of an ordinary man,
but give me a badge and a uniform and I'll behave like Genghis Khan.
At school, the Careers lady said 'What do you want to be?
Do you want to join the Army, fly or do you want to go to sea?
Do you want to be a doctor, lawyer, baker, butcher or nurse?
You could even be a computer programmer or a composer of musical verse.
Yes, you can choose the whole plethora, from Nothing to Director'
and I beamed and said: 'It's plain to see – I want to be a Ticket
Inspector!'
I want to wear a black uniform and have people afraid of me!
I want to punish the poor for trying to get something for free!
I want to see them squirm because they haven't got a ticket
and relish the moment I say 'There's my boot – lick it!'
Of course I'm only joking, yes I have a sense of humour,
I'm really quite a decent chap or at least that is the rumour.
I think of myself as an ordinary guy with ordinary ambition:
car, wife, garden, kids and house, retirement and pension.
The idea I'm a pawn
bought by a capitalist machine
is something I
never think about 'coz I choose to not know what you mean.
But there isn't
much difference between me, a traffic warden or security guard
we've all sold our
morality cheap and our sympathy by the yard.
I'm sorry you're
humiliated in public (not really), that you beg and plea and sob,
but I'm not really
a baddy, my friend, like Eichmann - just doing my job.
I've heard all the
excuses, you know, nothing’s new in my line
and I'll even
address you Madam or Sir before I issue your fine.
My colleagues and I
- devoted pros, our duty never lacks
and we're much more
efficient as a team, that's why we hunt in packs.
Where we have the
most success is where people are most poor,
like council
estates or ghettos where the incomes are much lower,
where people are
desperate to get to work or save a few quid for grub
but you'll notice
it doesn't stop them smoking or boozing down the pub!
But to say I'm on a
power trip is really rather silly
and no I don't
behave like a tyrant because of a microscopic . . . ego.
In my fantasies I'm
a hero, a saviour and protector
but in reality I'm
a (insert adjective and noun here)
-
that's why I'm a Ticket Inspector.
The Problem with
Chocolate
The problem with
chocolate, from what I've understood:
addictive and expensive
but tastes very good
and though I love the
odour and, as I said, the taste,
dentist isn't a fan and
neither is the waist.
Another problem with
chocolate: more popular than cocaine,
legally profitable,
twice as much to gain.
Cadbury's, Nestle,
Lindt all making an absolute mint
but the people that
make them rich (us!) are usually skint.
Put it in our cookies,
put it in our cakes,
put it in our cereals,
put it in our shakes,
put it in our mousses,
put it in our desserts,
we eat it 'til our
teeth fall out or our kidneys hurt.
Sell it to us in boxes,
in bars and in eggs.
Offer it to our dog,
that's why it sits and begs.
Use it to bribe our
children and stifle all their cries,
put it in their ice
cream and flash it before their eyes.
Ensure we're addicted,
constantly in need,
bombard us with
advertising, stoke and fuel our greed
along with burgers,
sugar, additives, make us fat by stealth,
normalize obesity and
strain the national health.
Another problem with
cocoa, one that bugs the most,
much is grown in West
Africa or on the Ivory Coast
and the rest in South
America where people don't make what they oughta
just like their
Indonesian cousins on the other side of the water.
It's called the Ivory
Coast ‘cause white Europeans were there
to plunder slaves and
elephant's tusks with profits not to share
but when slavery was
abolished and the elephants all had died,
the white men said
'What else can we steal to keep us satisfied?'
so they planted cocoa
everywhere, hired children as young as ten
to sow the cocoa beans
and harvest it for them
and paid the sort of
wages to make Europeans blush
and if they were
reluctant got a little push.
Exploitation,
trafficking soon became the norm
but as long as Billy
Bunter got his Ovaltine in a big mug nice and warm
and another unpalatable
fact, this you can't deny it,
the workers that pick
this stuff can't even afford to buy it!
So a final problem is
when our taste buds are anointed,
thousands of kids and
parents are all being exploited,
with a salary that’s a
pittance, one dollar a day,
from sunrise in the
mountains to sunset in the bay,
six days a week, fifty-two
in a year,
no minimum wage, no
unions there,
no medical, no schools,
no pensions, no thanks,
just greedy First World
mouths and greedy First World banks.
So the next time you're
thinking about chocolate for a nibble or a bite
don't forget to say
'Who cares, as long as I'm alright !'
or grow a conscience
like me and wallow in choc-a-dence
but don't forget to buy
Fair Trade and give the workers a chance.
Being
British abroad
The thing about being
British abroad's though you never really change
though everything else
around you does - the familiar's suddenly strange.
A square peg in a round
hole, you cling like truth to a liar
trying to make your new
world bend to your desire.
You can follow your
national teams to bolster your ID
and sports you never cared
about suddenly get priority.
You can wave a Union Jack
or stick GB on your car,
try to hold the crowd back
while queuing vainly at the bar,
insist on milk in your
coffee and sweetener in your tea,
read English papers and
Radio Four at three,
eat an English breakfast,
spill ketchup on your vest,
boast about the good old
days and on your laurels rest.
Accepted concepts taken as
gospel melt like molten wax
dentist, banking,
directions, car trouble, an ache, admin, tax.
Struggling to explain your
needs within a dictionary's pages,
you mime and grunt like a
stupid twit, inside frustration rages.
You flounder in silly
arguments trying to get your point across
and get into trouble at
work by disagreeing with your Boss.
'You don't unders-tand!'
becomes your daily plea.
The penny drops: 'Who
don't understand? O my God, it's me!'
But it's a losing battle
'cause the world is bigger than you,
grinds you down, wears you
out like a walking stick or a shoe,
beats you up, slaps your
chops and orders you to sober up
just because you won the
war and once won the world cup.
You were told GB was
everything, beyond a mere zoo,
a pond to dip your toes in
but cloudy not clear and blue
yet the further you go
away from it, the smaller GB gets
and all you held important
shrinks and like a sun, it sets.
And you want to remain a
part of it but must accept you are apart,
abandon worn-out
friendships but for new ones lose your heart.
'This is the centre of the
world!' you think, but then you stumble and fall
and live abroad and
realise the world has no centre at all.
The less adventurous say:
'Not me! I'd miss family and friends'
but that's not hope of
change talking, that's fear of changing ends.
Born and dead in the very
same place while all you do is moan
but were you ever really
challenged, ever left your comfort zone?
If we all spoke the same
language we'd end up saying the same things,
a world of 'Can't' and 'Won't' and the negativity that
brings.
A scientific experiment -
labelled and analysed,
trying to shape it to our
ends instead of rationalized.
And those who stay behind
get defensive when criticised,
they think you're
criticising them but you're simply politicised!
Media, history, tradition,
culture – it's really a double-edged sword,
it can make you strong at
home but can be meaningless abroad.
The biggest surprise I
ever had was teaching in a French school,
I asked a history
question, was left looking a fool:
'What happened in England
in 1066?' - I saw 30 faces blank
until one brave kid raised
his hand and said 'Ze English invented ze bank?'
Nationalists talk of 'us and them', 'foreigner' clichés abound,
but we're migrants in a
rudderless boat going round and round and round.
If all you know is only
one way then you never see the rest,
the Self is never
challenged nor convictions put to the test.
British life is island
life – a drawbridge and a moat,
pull it up, shut out the
strife like an immigrant in a boat.
Drip-fed technology our
attention's soon diverted
and we end up talking to
ourselves or preaching to the converted.
Being British abroad's
Pandora's box – once opened, never shut.
Do I regret opening it?
Ha! I'd like to say 'no', but . . .
Tony Stowers - Is a 59 year old 'old school' punk poet (British punk from 1976-1984). He likes strong rhymes, topical issues and (mostly but not always) ABCB schemes. He's been writing and performing his own work for 40 years and has about 200 in total, almost all made for oral delivery. If he laid them out as poems they'd take up too many pages so, he lays them with the minimum of design and urges readers to speak them aloud as this is where the true beauty of the rhymes come to their fore. He thinks of them as songs without music. He has a website www.tonystowers(dot)com and scrapes a living as a writer.
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