Who sings because they have a song
or because they have a sayhow am I to tell them apart
and will it matter anyway?
press the buttons, twist the knobs,
turn the key and speed away.
Potatoes, tomatoes, fresh mushrooms
a pack of meat, jars of preservesbread is boring, but devil’s food
is far too rich, this gateau’s worse
how much stuff do we consume!
and how little it takes to starve!
The parking attendant comes and barks
in his fluorescent uniformstraight cut left back long look sharp -
the coins transfer smooth and warm
abject hands give clipped commands
toot the horn and whoosh off home.
An old man stands by the red light
he wears a rim of dusty white hairhis eyelids don’t quite fit his eyes
could be his age, could be despair
he makes no pitches of his life
just offers tissues to the midday air
the glass is filmed, the scenes are dimmed
but nothing’s ever dimmed enougha breathy, jingly radio sings
about namby-pamby fancy love
peppermint fresheners cover the stink
of dust and blood, keep windows up
Children stand on ladders by trees
trim them into top-tail smartothers dance by the side and sweep,
their broomsticks shorter than the dirt
adults and children no longer meet
at the old house, times are hard.
I carry my bags on the right side
the left shoulder’s gone a bit stiffanother peace of urban slice
nothing unusual where we live
the doorman’s smile is sad and wide
he carries all bags for a small tip.
The rallies get long, the rallies get large
songs are sung but the audience thinssomewhere tyrants are in charge
elsewhere seasonal shopping begins
but everywhere the times are hard
and bones shake looser in nervous skins
you’ll tell me where to go and when
the rest is a case of semanticsyou can say it’s a song, or a slogan
it’s up to you to match and mix
some sing as they fill up on reason
and for others nothing clicks.
Shared with poets for OLN@dVerse