Month: November 2004

  • Decided to put the Terry poem on the The_Clowne_from_Clown  site. Though any comments left here will be answered by this blog.


    ________________________


    Death Of The Reverend D.H. Smith.



    He hung himself yesterday,

    The vicar who had lost his faith,

    He who had seen one child too many killed

    By a Christian soldier.



    He had hung himself on the bell-rope,

    It had rung once

    And then was silent.



    He was a good man,

    A kind man

    Who could take no more hyprocrisy

    From a Labour leader who goes to church

    And who had given orders

    To destroy a people.



    He hung himself yesterday,

    Did the Reverend D.H. Smith.



    When I went to his parish

    To see his weeping wife;

    A mass of flowers had been placed

    At the lynch-gate

    By a people who still believed

    In a distant God.





    Rev Tobias Trontby +

     

    __________________

     

    “In Somebody’s House”



    We sat in somebody’s house,

    Just talking,

    You and I

    As we rarely did

    After those first few months

    Of infatuation.



    We sat there in somebody’s house,

    In love and holding hands

    And talking about our dreams.



    You were as you was back then, you know,

    Handsome, lively, always ready to listen.

    It was the time you only used your fist

    To clench a glass,

    And your size-12 boot

    To sway on your knee

    In the gentle rhythm of your Welsh voice.



    We were in somebody’s house,

    Just talking.



    And yes, it was a dream.

    It had to have been a dream,

    A dream like the dream

    That quicky died

    Once I was your slave,

    And you my master…



    Except perhaps

    When we were in somebody’s house,

    And butter wouldn’t melt

    In that fucking mouth of yours.





    Tiffy Witherington.

     

    __________________

     

  • Tomorrow, a large poem byTerry hisself.

     

     

     

    Looking Into the Mirror of His Life.





    He looked into the mirror of his life,

    And saw that inside the mirror

    He was a girl.



    This was a great shock to him, you know,

    For he had never fancied men,

    And not since he was a child

    Growing up in the valleys

    Had he done anything

    Remotely a bit girlish.



    Yes, he was gentle, that’s true,

    Good with children,

    And boyo, could he make a great souffle!



    But still he didn’t expect to see

    Inside the mirror of his life,

    Same name, same hair, same smile

    But as a girl.



    He saw himself naked bach,

    And yet felt no urge,

    It was as if he was looking at his own twin sister

    There, in the mirror.



    He watched himself

    Slipping on a dress and giving a whirl

    And then an embarrassed adult giggle

    As if a God had caught her

    With the sin of self-desire.



    He put on make-up, aye,

    And picked up a handbag

    And went dancing into the streets

    Of his, her, native Cardiff.



    Was she conscious that he, her, whatever,

    Was looking at her so diligently like,

    And indeed, not missing a breath?



    If she was aware,

    (And honestly bach, how could she be?)

    She took it all in her stride

    In the mirror



    The mirror of his life

    Partly played backwards

    From the moment he had died.





    The Poet Known as “Empty Chairs”

  • coming here on FRIDAY NIGHT, A NEW POEM ABOUT LIFE AFTER DEATH!

     

    Back to poetry, at least for the first of the two pieces today. (pic=Tiffy’s Pub)

    —————



    What’s a Woman Got to Do?

    ________________________



    What’s a woman got to do,

    What is she to do

    When she can’t go out for lunch

    Without some seedy bloke

    Trying to chat her up by saying

    He would love a f***.



    What’s a woman got to do,

    What is she to do

    When a yob rides a bicycle

    On the pavement, runs into her

    And calls her an old bitch?



    When that old bore from up the street

    Is coming over to see her

    To want to know all her business

    And wants to tell her everyone else’s?



    What’s a woman got to do

    What is she to do

    When the town centre is run down

    And covered with estate agents

    And charity shops

    On two sides of a busy road

    Where the panda crossings never work.



    What’s a woman got to do

    What is she to do

    When she is behind a woman in a checkout queue

    Who does nothing but moan,

    Whilst behind her a small boy

    Wipes his melting chocolate hands

    All over her clothes?



    As for shopping in London,

    Forget it!

    You can’t get in by car

    The trains never run on time,

    And as for the buses…

    They are crowded and smelly

    And may well contain

    Those very same men

    That you threw out of your pub the other night

    And who said they’ll get even.



    What’s a woman got to do

    What is she to do?

    If she stays at home

    And has her shopping delivered

    They’ll forget her bread

    Ask if kidneys wlll do as they ran out of mushrooms,

    Forget that cheap tin of baked beans

    And send her de luxury butter beans instead…



    And that is if the damned computer works,

    And if they have received her order

    And it wasn’t wiped clean

    Along with their spam

    Of dodgy pills

    And letters from some high up bod

    In Nigeria…



    What’s a woman got to do,

    What is she to do?




    Tiffy Witherington.



    _____________

    And my next piece has appeared on my Clowne site because it’s true, only slightly embellished to make up for the bits no longer in my memory, ie the conversations. Alarmingly though, the bulk of it is true.

    As no one ever bothers about the true me, I’ll reprint it here.



    _____________

    Great Auntie Cathy



    ________________



    (prologue) I once wrote the following memory in story-form as if it were fiction. The basic facts are all true. Cathys fears of motor-transport, Telly and  host of other things, Cathy san teeth, san work, Cathy dying in her bed. The last bit is changed as Great Auntie Cathy actually died in my sister’s bed. Susan would not sleep in it again. In those days, my dad’s copper’s wages were low, but on top of the expense of a funeral was the expense of a new bed.



           Great Auntie Cathy. A true story.



            ________________



      I’ll never forget Great Auntie Cathy. She was a strange woman, not fat nor shapeless, but a mixure of the two. She had no teeth in and kept scratching herself.



      The main eccentric of this eccentric woman was her fussiness over food. She would not touch tea, coffee, potatoes, alcohol, eggs, cakes and sugar. Her main diet was bread, cheese and milk.



      One day Great Auntie Cathy was taken ill, and living by herself as she was, my parents decided to help Cathy’s children by having the old lady to stay for two weeks.



      Like many country stations, Matlock’s was deserted. When the train drew up, only one person got off, and she was not our Great Auntie.



      It transpired that the old lady had insisted in walking to her station, despite her ill-health, and so she missed both her train and the connection south.



      Three hours and five trains later. the train rattled in sparks as cold as dandelion clocks in the autumn twilight.



      Susan and I had stayed on to meet Great Auntie Cathy, and we saw her get off the train with four big suitcases.



     



      It was no good, she utterly refused to travel by bus, said it made her sick, so we let the old Bristol single-decker go and looked hopefully at a taxi. But Cathy snorted and said in her rasping voice, “Me, pay for a taxi young Sue? Not on my nelly, we will walk!”



      Imagine two children of nine and ten carrying two big suitcases each through a park and up a big hill for an ungrateful old lady.



      Somehow we got home, and mother made a cup of tea. After a cold walk there was nothing we children wanted better, but not Great Auntie who demanded water, and told us in coarse terms what she thought of children who drank other than milk or water.



      Cathy didn’t like her bed, it was too hard, her room was too cold, but she hated the smell of hot-water bottles.



      Boy, here was a real loonie! Susan and I were thrilled to bits, this was something out of “The Beano”. But the woman soon wore us all down.



    It took the best part of the night to get Cathy into Susan’s bed, Susan having to sleep in with me.



      Breakfast the next morning was a farce, lunch a disaster. Great Auntie Cathy was not so much a complainer than a fretter, it was not that she disliked things, she had phobias against them.



      She couldn’t be in the same room as the dog, and was petrified of our docile cat. We had a new television and was proud of it, but this unmerry widow had a fit when the telly was switched on.



      It came as a relief that the next day was a Monday, and we could escape to School, and Dad to his beat.



      The two-weeks dragged into a month, and Cathy was driving Mother around the bend. Cathy feared everything, leaves falling on her, rain “pop” music, my father smoking, and us talking…



      On the very day Great Auntie Cathy was due to go home, father said “Terry, go and wake up the dragon” I crawled upstairs, crept into “her” bedroom, and saw a pair of vacent eyes looking back at me.



      She had made our lives hell, now her own life was going to the same place, and we had the expense of burying her, with the embarrassment of explaining to the rest of Father’s family how she died in our house.



      Life was not made any sweeter to learn she had left the whole of her money to her parish church.



      As I said, I’ll never forget Great Auntie Cathy, in fact, she became one of the great boring conversations of my life.


    Terry Cuthbert.

  • Seven Haiku

    ___________





    walking to the trees:

      moon climbing down

         from branch to branch.





    so lonely today:

      goldfish gets

         an extra feed.





    a lonely begger:

      on his blanket,

         a single snowflake.







    on board ship:

      there’s no need to rock

         the baby to sleep.





    arrived home.

      saw the note.

         ate the plums.





    snow

         where sand should be

    ice

      where sea…







    Her programme off.



      Husband home.


                           (Tiffy Witherington).

  • First, The Three-Headed Sarahs’ have been told to clean up their site. The Moral Right is everywhere today.



    Now for two more pieces. Charlie had written two, but I thought I’ll give you prose for a change. The first is in dialect. any words you need explained, ask in the comment box.



    ___________



    Ethel and I.

    __________





    When I got home from alloutment, I saw Ethel by yon window.



      You know, some folk move about a lot, and their memories get diluted in new realities. Ethel & I, we’ve lived in same house nigh on 55 years, that is a lot of memories, a ruddy lot of memories.



      On the mantlepiece, at last over a gas fire to make it easier for us in mornin’, is a photograph of whom were the pup of our three sons; David on his motorbike. Why is it there? For it were same ruddy bike that had ended his young life, that it were, weren’t his fault they say, charlies found the stolen van what did it some mile ahead.



      Twenty-two were lad, David’s bike had hardly a mark on it, and I expect as poor pup lay dying he noticed that his pride & joy were still A-One.



      Ethel, house-proud in most ways, didn’t like dusting, said dust were bits of those who once walked the Earth. Said we make the dust & we will become the dust, dust were sacred like.



      Royt sentimental Ethel be, suppose I were too. Anyroad, I came back from digging, with two cabbages and a few parsnips, I put veg in kitchen and walked to window. “Alroyt me duck?” I asked.



      “Just thinking Fred,” she sighed, “thinking of the past.”



      Later on as she were cooking the parsnips and the smell flooded house, belonged to railway, house did, I bought it, rest in row is private too.



      Now railways gone, pit gone, steel-works all but gone. We get fair bit of trouble from youngsters, but they only be bored with Renishaw.



      Anyroad, Ethel were cooking parsnips in kitchen when I heard her go upstairs.



      “Royt strange” I thought, and I followed her up. She were bleating on bed.



      In the distance were sound of motorbike reving up, only other sound were Fluffy, our cat, snoring on bedroom mat.



      “Come on luv, make you a nice cuppa!”



      Lass looked at me and lit a fag, “Hab thou forgotten what today be Fred?”



      “Nay lass” I said, “Would have been pup’s birthday, I ain’t forgotten.”



      The motorbike roared past our house and melted into the distance, when it were gone, birds were singing on our garden tree.



      “Better see to dinner” Ethel said, smoke drifting up towards the ceiling.




    Horace Smith Esq.



    _________________



    Text Barkertown.



    ______________



      On the Oxford-London bus, I fell asleep. As I had a freedom ticket, I decided to break my journey along the way at a small town on the edge of the Smoke. After a cup of tea in a cafe, I fell better and I wondered where I was, I looked for a name, but upon pillar-boxes, telephone kiosks or manhole covers, there was no name of the place that I was in.



      I looked at my cafe-receipt, it said on it “Barkertown”. Where??? I had never heard of a Barkertown! I stopped a policeman and lied to him to try and save face, “I’ve just driven down here” I said, “And I am not quite sure where I am.”



      “You are in Barkertown Sir.”



      “But Officer” I continued, “I have never heard of this place!”



      “Let’s look at your car, did anyone die with you?”



      I sat down, the Officer moved on, I heard a child crying, I realised then that was the first child I had seen, and most of the people here were very old.



      I frowned, and found a pub, and I started to chat with a sad looking young woman feeding her infant.



      “New to Barkertown too?” She sighed. “No fun being dead.”



      “Sorry?” I asked.



      “We were murdered you know, Stacey here and I, how did you die?”



      This woman was clearly no nutcase, so I said to her “I must have died in my sleep.”



      A man came up to me and said “There has been a terrible mistake Sir, you are still alive, I’ll put you on a bus.”



      “What about these poor people?”



      “The lady and her child will have to stay, they will get used to it, this is Heaven, we’ll take care of them!”



      I woke up, the bus was at Notting Hill Gate. I had been dreaming again, then I looked in my pocket, there was a cafe receipt marked “Barkertown” and a note saying “Tell the police that Tracy and Stacey Holdsworthy of Thurrock, Essex were murdered by Tom Lewis, and proof is in a box buried in his garden.”



      “It was true Sir” a policeman said a few days later, “But how did you get the note?”



      “I went to Barkertown” I replied, “Have you ever been in love with a dead person?”




    Horace Smith Esq.



    (Note: that user name was the anti-hero of a novel I had written!)

  • ________________

    ________________

    You can never learn enough my friends,
    It’s the one thing that you do learn
    In the last of your golden days;
    When the Summer wine hath been bottled and sold

    And the leaves hath fallen from the trees

    And buried the youth that was inside thee.



    You can never learn enough I’ve found,

    In the closing chapters of my book,

    When I start to say goodbye to certain places

    In the knowledge my eyes shall never view again

    Their rich tapestory that makes this planet of God

    Such a wonderful place to live one’s life.



    And as I stand on this pulpit my friends,

    I would like you to share this reflection with me,

    We are all unique, He hath made us so,

    And yet we all walk through the same passage of life

    The beginning, the end, and all else between;

    So lets us now pray in the light of this church

    And thank the Lord for both thy and thee.



    Amen.




    The Reverend Tobias Trontby. +

    —————-

    _______________

    _______________

     


    I had hardly any sleep again last night

    It’s driving me bonkers.

    How can I run a pub like this?



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    It’s getting me forgetful,

    It looks like I am drunk

    As I prop my tits upon the bar

    And stare at infinity.



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    I nearly fell asleep at the wheel yesterday,

    On a stretch of the M50.



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    “What’s the matter Taff?”

    A customer asks

    “Dreaming about the valleys again, look you?”



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    “Perhaps she’s in love”

    Mabel shouts from her pint mug.



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    The rain beats on the windows,

    The pub sign creaks in the wind,

    The chime-clock ticks on and on…

    Oh where have I sinned?



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.



    “HEY-LOW!!!”

    “She’s in love, Fish.”

    “Sorry” I mutter

    “What did you ask for?”



    I hope I’ll sleep tonight,

    I bet I won’t.





    Tiffy Witherington.

    ————-

     

    (pic=Rev Toby’s Church.)

  • My The_Clowne_from_Clown  blog has a new piece up, you can comment there if you wish but I will answer your comments from this blog.

    The Clowne blog is in prose and is my reality.

     

    “George Dixon”

    ———————–

    “Evening All…”



    Most of you would not have heard of

    “Dixon Of Dock Green”

    On the TV, in the late fifties, early sixties.

    The laid-back copper who had inspired

    Many a person to become a policeman.



    It was a real George Dixon,

    (And a real name, this once;)

    That had given me one of my most shocking cases.



    In the strangely named village of Piddletrenthide,

    Neighbours reported noises from a chocolate-box cottage.

    My mate and I went to it

    To find the front door wide open,

    And to find the bodies of a woman and  three small children.

    A fourth, a little girl, was hiding in the garden, in deep shock.



    Her daddy had killed her family because “mummy had kissed another man.”



    A week later,

    A call came through

    That a man was sleeping rough on Portland.

    As no one had escaped from the prison over there

    We guessed it could have been the brutal killer,

    A one “George Dixon”.



    I myself, found the man near a cliff,

    I was so tempted to push the bastard over,

    I am sure everyone would have turned a blind eye…

    But I upheld the law

    For him to get ten lousy years.



    The other prisoners in the jail where he went

    Did what perhaps I should have done,

    But why George Dixon was on that jail roof

    We shall never know.





    Charlie The Copper.

    ___________________

     


    “The Scream”

    ——————–



    What does

    “A burning bar of soap” mean?



    A policeman’s lot is not a happy one,

    As they sung in “The Pirates Of Penzanze.”

    Upstairs was the wife

    And our two little ones,

    And there I was filling in my crime sheets

    In the days before computers.



    I heard a scream

    And looked out of the window

    I couldn’t see anything,

    But then there was another scream.



    I grabbed my tunic and helmet

    And walked outside

    And saw nothing.



    I walked out into the village street,

    Not a soul was to be seen.



    After a while, I called it a night

    Went to bed and slept.



    The next night I was in bed

    When the misses woke me and said

    “Charlie, I just heard a woman scream!”



    This time it was in jim-jams and slippers

    When I walked into the empty street.



    Then there it was, a scream,

    A scream that sent shivers through my bones,

    And it was coming from the house across the street.



    “Do be careful luv!” My wife was by me in her dressing gown

    And giving me my truncheon.

    The blood-curdling scream hit up again

    Then I banged on the door.



    “Oh, sugar!” A man’s voice shouted,

    I was about to smash the window

    When our young married neighbours came to the door

    Dressed in Shakespearean costumes.



    They had been practising their roles

    In the forthcoming production of Macbeth.

    Guess who was playing Lady Macduff

    Watching her children being killed?



    “Next time” I sighed, “Do tell me first!”

    My kids were out on the street

    And a police car could be heard,

    For my wife had rung for help.



    We got given two tickets fot the production

    It was only an amateur affair,

    But “Lady Macduff” gave a performance

    Worthy of an Oscar,

    And I shivered inside when she screamed,

    And I thought about

    “A burning bar of soap”.





    Charlie The Copper

  • parental advisory!


    A new personae: (try-out to see if it works). First poems by any new personae leaves something to be desired. Like all fiction-actors, I take time to blend into a personality. So hopefully, Charlie The Copper’s poems will improve.


    ____________________


     


    “The Chisel Beach Body.”



    It was at Chisel Beach Weymouth

    Where a child, a boy aged five

    Told his mummy that a man was on the beach

    With worms coming out of his mouth, he had smelt “yucky.”

    The woman contacted us straight away.



    We donned our masks and special suits

    And gloves too.

    Forensics were there in their droves

    As the Inspector held the boy’s excited hand.



    A murder victim on the beach!

    We shuddered at the thought of it,

    As efforts were made

    To keep the growing crowd at bay.



    Inspector Morris grabbed the boy,

    And gave him to his mother,

    And bent over the terrible find…

    And started suppressing laughter!



    What the f***?

    We ran to the body,

    There was some type of worms in it,

    The boy was right.



    And the tailor-dummy

    Did smell yucky.



    We gave the boy a ride in a police car,

    And thanked him for his action,

    And I wonder to this day

    If the boy believes

    That he had found a real man.





    Charlie The Copper


    ————————–

     


    It was a boiling hot night,

    I said to Maureen

    “I hope we don’t have to chase anyone on foot.”

    Fortuneswell in Portland was a quiet place,

    And we just drove around it bored to tears.

    Then we saw him, an old man in a big thick coat,

    He was sweating and swearing and walking funny.



    Maureen said “leave him!”

    I was about to when he flagged us down.

    “Can you take me to hospital Constables?” he asked

    “Can you remove that coat first?” I wanted to know.



    Well, to cut a long story short,

    (You must expect cliches, I am new to this poetry lark!)

    The man only had a downstairs toilet,

    And every night he took a hot water bottle to bed to pee into.

    Tonight he had got his old john thomas stuck into it

    And could not remove it,

    Thus the coat and the hospital.



    Everyone laughed there to see the man’s knob

    Stuck inside that piece of rubber.



    You never know what to expect

    When you are an English copper!





    Charlie The Copper.

    —-

    Profile pic (comment section) Dorset Police badge, the home of the ficticious policeman.

  • I could do with an angel right now,

    Someone to talk to.

    Someone to stop me wanting to die,

    Someone who will not laugh at me

    Should I want to cry.



    I look out of the window

    At the cold uncaring night,

    Hoping that my angel

    Is among those frozen lights.



    I’m drowning now my angel

    In a life full of sea,

    Won’t you come and help my heart,

    Before it gives up on me?



    I know I have never asked before,

    Too proud to want to believe,

    But I have grown heavy with air

    And I can no longer breathe.



    I badly need an angel right now,

    I’ve never asked before

    For someone to make me free.

    Yes, I badly need an angel right now,

    Will you be the one for me?





    Terry Cuthbert.

  • On The Foot Of Riber Hill, Matlock.



    In the end,

    there was only the going back to die.

    He had left everything else behind,

    his dull flat, his depts, his car,

    his sponging children…

    He just emptied his bank account

    and got a train home.

    Back to the old place he went,

    back to the place where he was happiest,

    back to die.



    Next day they found an old man’s body

    at the foot of Riber Hill.

    They did not know who he was,

    all he had on him were clothes, money,

    and a smile on his dead face.



    He had come back home to die,

    to die where he was happiest,

    below the cliffs of Matlock,

    away from the smoke.



    It was nearly a year before they found out

    who he was,

    a lonely retired old man

    left behind when the world moved on

    from his dying.



    I think of him now,

    the smile on his face;

    and I long myself to go back home to die.



    Back to the place where I was happiest,

    On the foot of Riber Hill.





    Terry Cuthbert.


    (pic is of Riber Castle on Riber Hill)