Grace -- In the 1960'sA Poem by ThurstonI. The Railway Ave 'v wotever bowser ‘n bumpkin town yu know has a No.3 council cream and weathermen tioned people’s palace too and here, where the people’s malice knew only the town’s boundary OUR MARY moved in a grubby green, remainder of thirteen woollen moulting fur-collared coat from Percy St. sometime home of Holdendad, tiedcordsMum and Sally (where’s your britches?) the third knot of her secret St. Megan’s cord untied by the b***h god dess who says only good girls fall afraid of stretch marks but yet unafraid of her cardboard hovering suitcase. II. 'N the town woke and rose to it’s newest recalcitrant, 'n the town caught a whiff of her new-tried c**t, 'n the town saw that MARY moved amongst them and moved together like a crowd of weed in tide of cans on Coke's conveyers of hooligans after the movies a stoning crowd, a crowd in the right led by a red-faced man with a hairy-MARY belly to bow 'er. III. The train beam neatly flung her shadow back dancing it on the black locomotive's house:
her brief & bright answer for her cleanest sin & son. © 2010 Thurston |
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Added on October 2, 2010 Last Updated on October 4, 2010 AuthorThurstonHuntly, North Waikato, New ZealandAboutI enjoy James K. Baxter, Jon Silkin, Sylvia Plath, to begin with. Want to live forever. Yet to write my best poem, but have been equal runner-up in Commonwealth Poetry Award 1976 for my book Believed .. more..Writing
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