APOLOGIA IN VERSE
One was enough but I’ve done more
and many more hot on the heels
of achievement, trying to work out
who I am and what it all means.
2025 was a big year for revelations:
I found out I was marked, specifically,
by a failed experiment into
the maths of the new colour…
it means I need to augment my body,
body of work that is, so that
whomsoever it is looking back
can see the light fairly and clearly.
I also found out I may have lent
a little hand in helping invent
the net, at seven, and that my dad
might also have been sponsored by some philosophers
to provide the real, human witness
from some dead rock star’s mangled book.
This was information I needed
and was absent for most of my life
like the oxygen the soul needs,
like the liberty of the human subject.
So I have had to come back on
and make amends even though
my work was never intended
to be about what you do. It also
dawned on me that my intended,
my evergreen light, my ideal
had even been with my little brother,
when I had left the school, so
for me to have come on, with
a book of love poems for her was wrong.
She may be a new parent by now,
so we needed to have a new pow-wow,
and re-organise the body of work,
with asparagus in Paradise left out.
MY
FIRST
(for
Dr. Calculator Ptom)
The
best one was when I went through
what
I went through and
was
still homeless on the street.
I
had helped invent the net at seven,
been
the witness from The
Lords And
The
New You Know Who
at eight,
was
marked by a failed experiment
into
the maths
of the new
colour,
attained
the face of stars,
which
might’ve been scripted in the Bible,
forewarned
of September 11th
in 2000,
written
the highest-marked English Literature
A-level
exam essay in the nation,
recorded
an album on binaural earphones, promising
to
plug my senses in the mains,
had
an effervescent mobile, reverberating
the
rhythm of ‘William Tell’
through
every technological
inlet
in the room before it rang,
become
mentally ill but still
pushed
on to get a First, writing
for
example a
portfolio of defaced bank notes,
hosted
the Plough alignment for
a
rhythm change in the White House,
and
found myself homeless, sleeping
on
a park bench in London, looking
at
the satellites mixed with the stars.
There
was a fox hunting, looting
bins
in the park where my bench was,
so
I departed, afraid, and went
to
the steps of the local church,
where
the last guy before me
had
left some cardboard boxes to sleep on,
to
have
between yourself and the ground…
but
it was still so cold, I woke
with
a viscid mortar in my throat
at
dawn,
shivering,
penniless and set about
the
near impossible task
of
getting housed in a
council
emergency hostel
and
when I was there
after
a day of phonecalls
there
was a corridor
with
a lot of spare rooms
even
though the streets
were
filling with tramps.
That
was when the riots broke out.
I
wasn’t aware of them at first,
then
someone told me
to
leave my room, and I did,
went
out onto the street,
saw
the shop windows being smashed,
the
city looted and burned,
and
after a minute, I returned
to
my bed to read poetry…
I
did not participate in the riot.
But
I carried on living
at
the fringes of a wasteful society,
cycling
around “food”
for
a black dude
on
a riot-stolen bike.
Eventually,
I
phoned
my
dad and
said
I
missed the air in the north
and
asked him if I could come home
and
he said it was fine.
And
when I came home
my
story would continue…
I
worked at a numinous,
purple-bleeding
screen
in
an experiment into post-humanism,
built
the Tower as an instrument
of
philosophy, conducted
an
experiment into a tape
with
a pause where cut and re-
sealed
in the flimsy reel,
and
upon my father’s death
discovered
the sheet
where
pictures (seemingly depicting
my
own song lyric) grew.
Then
I felt like I was being
just
in surrendering the sheet
to
my brother who designed it,
who
laid it down, felt
like
I was all about
democracy
and freedom and fairness.
I
still didn’t earn a penny
throughout
the whole list
(and
know I am leaving other bits out
that
were also miraculous too)
but
at least I had a home
even
if it was just my mum’s.
Also
around the time of my dad’s passing
we
find I was bequeathed
an
heirloom, meaning
the
web-book
I had written at seven
which
had been in hibernation
in
the attic all these years…
I
also invented and falsified
the
Nirvana barcode around this time
so
was utterly surrounded
by
creative things. I
don’t
want to sleep on
the
street again, and know
it
isn’t right that I had to,
and
yet remain very poor.
They
say if I was on the left
I
would’ve been paid,
but
I had no political allegiance…
I
drift to the left these days,
but
still don’t get refunded.
And
surely if someone
started
to dole out payments
for
attaining the face
they
themselves
would
become tyrants?
In
the middle of the story
for
whatever reason there is,
I
became acutely mentally unwell
and
have been hampered by that
in
bringing you the Excellent News.
As
I write to you, I think
I
have things fixed at last,
where
the collections
I
published with Chipmunka
as
paperback and e-book
even
if they are terrible
are
also made available
to
read for free
on
my Blogspot page -
and
the other things I wrote
like
the philosophy phase
under
a nom
de plume
can
be ignored, as can
the
self-publications
from
before the collections.
As
you can imagine
I
don’t want to have gone
through
all that and to be Anon,
and
it could be a dangerous
decrease
in Individuality
if
I am forced to
(not
to mention
against
the law.)
Despite
bringing
things together
as
I have
online,
right
now the job
isn’t
completely done.
There’s
not a good-enough book
about
it all yet, and
I
find that upsetting.
There’s
no-one else
who
went through
what
I went through either,
no-one
to really ask for advice.
Some
say my best bit was Boot;
where
the face was attained,
on
a camping trip -
and
how in the
teenage
band
Oedipus
Wrecks
I
wrote the song
with
the line
about
the ocean
as
only I could.
But
if I were to
start
or to restart
with
the whole Oedipus
Wrecks
set-list, it
would
end in tragedy
at
my expense.
One
reason I want to test
how
long I can make a new poem
is
that in Russian Formalism they say
literature
should elongate
the
length and difficulty
of
perception as an
aesthetic
end
in
and of itself.
Mother’s
grand-children
are
coming up
to
stay with us soon,
and
I should’ve had
children
too. If
it
wasn’t for this dreadful
mental
illness I might…
if
I had stayed with Danielle
when
school was out
instead
of going down
south
to stay with Paul
I
would be married
with
children by now.
Instead
I stay up into the night
like
a vampire, in bad,
anti-social,
Gap year pattern.
The
Gap year pattern
is
why they are trying
to
axe me, like Syd
Barrett,
for
I was exiled
from
my own Gap
year band.
There
are two of us here.
Hopefully
now that I am not in debt
the
books I pay
to be published can be better.
For
who would publish it when it’s this bad?
Only
the mental health publisher!
Simon
says poetry in England
wears
a genteel facade…
what
I find hard
to
accept is that
poetry
is dead,
as
Dr. Bob tells me.
Back
at the end of my degree
I
got an MA place to read
Creative
Writing, colouring in,
joining
the dots, spot the difference,
but
the funding fell through,
I
couldn’t raise the funds,
so
told them I could only
do
it if it was free, which
they
couldn’t do, naturally.
That
was when I fell
to
London, carrying
not
enough money to survive
which
quickly went on rent
and
meant a sudden Lent,
meant,
as I say,
I
was on the street.
I
still remember that fox,
in
the park in the dark.
The
city was his psycho-
geographic
playground!
So
I suppose there is a difference
between
being financially rich
and
being rich in soulful terms
and
that though I am not
the
former I am the latter.
There
were holes in the soles
of
my shoes where the rain got in.
I
actually wore odd shoes
but
not knickers on the head for a hat.
THE PLOUGH-SHAPED STAIRS
The Plough-shaped stairs are made of pine,
up we go to the creaky mezzanine,
to gaze out at the garden of Gondwanaland-green
through the Victorian, stained-glass window, then
up another bit to the top of the stairs,
to the landing, where the bedrooms are.
But now it is Night and mum comes
tottering downstairs and goes out,
out into the garden of Gondwanaland-green
and calls me out there to look at the Plough!
It isn’t in the socket, but abstracted,
miles away and aslant. “One of those stars,”
she says “is the North star, and always
points north whatever time of day it is.”
We look at the stars together, without pareidolia,
without imposing order on something
through use, just as innocent spectators.
Then when we come back in, I sit
at the table in the kitchen and mum -
she goes walking up the Plough-shaped stairs.
She is carrying things, water for example.
The Plough-shaped stairs are one of
the house’s best features. She goes
step by step, lifting her little feet,
all the way up, past the creaky mezzanine,
and towards the source of the music, emanating
from her new Smartspeaker in her bedroom.
The music is old but is still relevant.
PRAYER
FOR RACHEL
May
God bless and keep you always,
radiant
angel of fragrance and grace.
May
the poet still graffiti your name
on
the wall around
the
edge of the universe,
e’
en on the keel
of
‘The Drunken Boat’
(to
translate ‘The Drunken Boat’
would
take talent but
the
graffiti on the keel
is
for masters.)
It’s
the day Samson cut off his hair.
They
told him also
if
he wants to keep hold of
a
teenage love poem for you,
he
should un-publish all the philosophy
he
brought out under a
nom de plume
and
write another one for you.
Unsure
what to do he or even I
think
of how all the CD’s
we
bonded over
are
now scratched
and
live in storage
in
boxes in the attic.
May
no trouble come your way,
may
you see the light of day,
may
you let your children play.
May
the blues and
the
blue cars go away.
I
remember handwriting-sex,
unsent
letters
that went on for whole notebooks,
writing
of the smiling
light
tunnelling
into
your owl brown eyes as you read…
I
went on big adventures there.
Now
you might understand
this
may be the last thing
I
get to do before I die.
CUMBRIAN
AIR
Cumbrian
air isn’t
“air
hair lair”
but
it’s good strong air
that’s
hard to tear.
I
put some of it
in
my pants
and
all at once
started
to dance.
But
silly this seems…
sometimes
I hear
gun
shots resound
loud
and clear,
in
Cumbrian air.
It’s
good for you
to
breathe it in
when
the sky is blue.
Beautiful
place,
beautiful
zone,
Cumbria
is,
but
I feel alone.
I
moan and groan
about
nothing at all
until
I notice
we
won the football.
BLUE
POEM NUMBER # 357
My
father was an international art smuggler nicknamed Blue.
We
still don’t know what it was.
He
died without letting us know.
It
could’ve been Hitler’s paintings - smuggling
them
over the old Berlin Wall, charging
the
Germans for their return.
It
could’ve been a pollen farm
high
in the Moroccan mnts, shipping
tonnes
of pollen to the States.
It
could’ve been The
Lords
And
The New Creatures,
for
he might’ve been
sponsored
by some philosophers to provide
the
real, human witness.
He
took his secrets to his grave,
left
behind only a list of French vocab that
is
a code to crack, in a little green book.
Now
it’s the World Cup.
I
remember dad never getting to see
Wayne
Rooney become England’s top goalscorer
which
he very soon after dad’s death did.
Wayne
Rooney was one of dad’s
favourite
all-time players.
Now
we have Harry Kane, but
without
dad I can’t enjoy the match.
Without
knowing of his line of work
it’s
difficult to repeat the experiment.
I
have a killer head ache and so mum
turns
up her music even louder.
I
loved my dad but we did
even
fight physically over his job.
When
you fight your dad you always lose.
I
was bright at Prep School,
the
most expensive Prep School there was, coming
top
of English every single term,
but
everyone else knew
how
their father earned his money,
so
I found it hard to get through,
get
past a certain stage.
He
told me I wasn’t allowed
to
deal with it until he was gone,
to
blurt family secrets in to the breeze.
He
would say I was good at public speaking,
learning
a poem and performing it
sometimes
in the poet’s accent
in
public… that musically
I
was only average… that
I
never came back from an acid trip
before
Sixth Form was even out…
that
at
bottom I
was not truly gay…
that
I went wrong with the maths
of
the new colour at a very young age.
Sometimes
I’d rather walk
round
the kitchen table
in
a circle for hours than face
any
more of my own writing
at
the flat, anti-Romantic laptop screen.
But
we won the football tonight!
We
won, wake up!
Be
happy with our nation’s win!
The
opposition gave us a good scare!
I
imagine part of the deal
was
not talking about the deal.
I
wonder what restrictions
this
imposes on me and
if
I already went wrong.
OLD
When
I get old I may still want
to
write Transition
To Philosophy
but
for me to leap ahead to that
would
be false if I haven’t left school.
By
now I face the problem
that
my transition to philosophy may be over,
but
the gist was we have to die,
atishoo-atishoo-we
all fall down.
THAT’S
IT
E’en
though it’s not Anon
I
see the Flo’ moving on
the
floor
up at mormor’s here
and
find in sharing room to cheer
for
we have written this
new Proust
and
with my hands which
can attest
to
weathers all about my head
that
mean the sharing of the bread
which
have been here
since the start
of
finding
salvation
in
art...
at
the
moment
Flo’s just the noise
of
playing with her baby toys
but
soon she’ll sleep and then wake
and
later eat a fairy cake
and
one day grow to be a mum
but
as
for myself
I cannot come
and
without the ability to ejaculate
I
may have grown a little late
and
can’t continue singing of
women
in the wind with love
so
I should say “That’s All Folks,”
it’s
impossible to mend your broken yolks,
e’
en when you sit with smokes
and
tell your friend some dirty jokes.
AURORA FLOREALIS REVISITED
Gilly flowers curtsey, not off the sound-map.
To make a flower-press would be womanly.
When our days still ended on cannabis
we would bemoan that flowers were legal.
To the tune of the wind I sink, then swim.
I no longer puff the evil weed these days.
It would be a reward, a kind of dialysis,
that separates the murk from the excellence.
I would need it to balance out my mind,
one homeostatic device for another one.
Now I worry that I am hurried and florid.
I hear an A. E. I. O. U. bird toot its long,
hollow horn out on the A595 and relax.
I hear its wheels go round, that it’s heavy.
*ketamineguitar*
POLLEN
DOOR
We
all know of Flora’s pretty pretext,
which
I was the one to spot and articulate,
even
though I had never known her kiss,
which
looking back was a mistake,
but
never has it been so well dealt with
as
when at the age of seven, I
separated
the pollen from its name,
which
I would like to do again,
e’
en if it be by quoting myself,
for
Jim Morrison has a theory
that
when an object is detached
from
its name, habits and associations
it
is finally free to become endlessly anything
and
when that object is pollen
never
has the theory been so beautifully tested,
never
has summer
love
been so evident,
never
has fresh air been so much the cause,
but
it might be for someone younger now.
GOLDFISH
BOWL UPDATE
Mrs.
Bloggins’s Goldfish Has Just Died,
the
local, parochial headline wants to read,
and
crossed
the water to the Other Side,
left
behind my almost ascetic greed
so
I suppose I am feeling a bit sad,
knowing
not why the goldfish is dead,
knowing
only that God is good,
hoping
its soul ascends Heavenward,
imagining
the newsflash on the TV,
or
online for anyone at all to see,
but
as the goldfish becomes
history
I
see it could be worse for you and me
for
if it was my brother’s <BEE>
there
would be damage in all Infinity.
FLEE
HAS SEEN A BEE
So,
Flee, you may have seen a bee
but
I don’t want you to see a rat.
It
isn’t right, if it’s according to me,
that
one should have to die like that.
The
bee would sail
across
the ocean
as
you lie back on the sunny green.
It
would be cross-pollinating the garden,
extracting
pollen for the mating queen…
once
my copy of Neil Curry’s volume
started
to smell of redolent perfume
so
I built the Tower in my bedroom.
There
were other books, a few of them
that
also exhibited signs of natural
magic
- for the smell was not a spillage in
my
Gap Year bag,
of
aftershave, but actual
magic.
I hope that when I am gone
someone
reads the Tower as I built it,
tall
and strong, lines left to right,
for
it wasn’t aftershave, I never spilled it,
and
you can take my word as true and quite.
DEAR
FLISS OR IS IT FLEE?
Dear
Fliss or is it Flee?
I
hope you are well-rested, okay, secure of direction, comfortable,
eating well. When I wrote this to you, the one we call H was walking
round, moving from the kitchen to the sitting room where mormor
awaited with
little
baby girl toys. I had just made a few touches to my Morrison mirror,
and got coal in for mormor, after a night with no sleep, only staying
up tending to my soul at a slinky screen. Mud outside was minimal, as
I made my avowal, still victimised so badly I cannot confess to it,
still wishing to be doing nothing else but write poetry. If this
missive ever gets through to you wake me up, for the dawn is strong
with James, and we feel in love despite the gypsies and the
government who loom. By now you might know me as pirate, who wanted
to get that line about the ocean in there but recognised it belonged
in a song, a song I wrote myself, after attaining the face, in about
1998, as if some kind of proof, the result of some bet, the end of
the quest, the treasure chest of dreams. So it being a song I decided
I would no longer mewl and puke to school. Even
though it seemed to land fair and square with me, the line about the
ocean in
the song when I was but
15
or 16 and a new Rimbaud, by now they had me down as Sid Vicious, who
was making something that was ours, though not quite sure if “our-ing
it along” was allowed in the proper vernacular. Voices are not
sweeties. Mormor went for a pee. Suicide is a shelf. I am so sick
with fear I may have a morning beer, even though it’s only 9 AM. I
could pretend it is gravy. Mormor comes in the kitchen, says it might
be too windy to do a barbecue today though she
has it all ready apart from the coal. The carrots and potatoes are
ready. You’re
in the room now, on the way out into the field, a beautiful little
girl, whom I call “madame,” whom it seems is getting ready to go
out into the field, while Seb is running up the fell, and it’s only
9. 30, still breakfast time, time for eggs, eggs not likely to cause
an adverse reaction, but not before you go out into the front garden
for some action, and not before H puts a hat on, and I try to see the
light on a fair, springful day. It’s just a shame I need to read up
on Trump every morning, for it disturbs me, as I try to see the
light, imagining sunlight blowing my hair about, and now you’ve got
your hat on and your wellies and are totally ready and can go out.
Love,
John
(who
might soon be snow or under the sleet)
THE
FEE
We
can’t tell what’s philosophy and what’s Felicity
but
we already D’d that
when
we did fliss or is it flee…
other
contendors include flot
as
in flotsam or flotbeat door
and
just plain simple “floss.”
Already
having done this,
I
think I should let you know
that
what I meant by saying
“d/
d/ d/ down”
in
the one that falsified the Nirvana barcode
was
nothing but the chord
on
the guitar fretboard
and
moving the D-shape down
a
fret though it’s irregular.
There’s
also the fee to pay,
which
I can cough up for an heirloom.
I
used to say fee instead of see
as
an infant and it could mix
the
verb to see and the verb to feel.
A
CANOROUS CHIME
Someone
gets in the power shower.
It
reminds me I don’t need power.
Flower
power is much better.
Writing
Flora a long love
letter.
You
could even call her “flower.”
Down
at the bottom of the Tower
I
looked up and saw her hair,
it
was dangling down everywhere.
I
climbed up it into her chamber.
She
was locked in by a protector.
He
was a tyrant, I was better,
I
was the one she wanted as lover.
I
took out my sword to free her,
defeated
the tyrant, had a breather,
took
her by the tiny hand and led her
down
the stair, her knight in shining armour.
In
the garden we heard some laughter.
It
might’ve been the film director
saying
this could go on forever,
flowing
like an endless river,
but
what was
needed
more than water
was
to cut her hair a bit shorter,
so
that we did, while a motor
drove
past on an unknown hour.
SIBLINGS
Brothers
are nice and sisters too,
always
there’ll be something to do,
but
they can elongate the queue
to
use in the morning the upstairs loo.
There
are also sibling rivalries,
to
please the parents, and to please
the
beauty queen who brings the bees
down
onto their humble knees.
John
Cleese says it like a brother -
no-one
is any more clever than another -
that
goes between your father and mother -
and
your brother and sister and any other.
It’s
boring not having a family,
and
I do have my brother living with me,
but
sometimes think in a different key
about
what’s likely to never be
and
yet with mother’s new grand children,
at
least she’ll get some satisfaction,
and
we are a tribe bonded in emotion
even
if scattered across the ocean.
I
hear Bob’s kids love it when he plays
on
the piano for them in multiple ways
that
mean the brightening up of days,
like
a way to cure a transient malaise.
Siblings
often squabble and fight
but
judging by mine own, it’s right
that
I would die for each of them tonight,
and
leave them playing in the light.
AN ATTEMPT AT CHILDREN’S LITERATURE
One day, John, James, Robert and Flo’ were lying on the grass. They were watching clouds pass by in the sky and pretending they were animals from the zoo, all sorts of creatures in the clouds.
“Wouldn’t it be nice,” said John, “to be able to cling on to the vapour trail of that aeroplane all the way up there?”
“They might look down,” said James, “and see the patchwork quilt below.”
John was the eldest at 12, and James the next at 10, and Robert the next at 9, and Flo’ which was short for Florence was the youngest at 7.
They were born in a season each. John was Spring, James Autumn, Robert was winter, then Flo’ came along in summer. It was summer by now and the weather had been quite warm. The day was a sunny day, good for a game of football in the field near their house.
They lived at the foot of a fell, which is a northern word for hill. It was a big, ancient mound of land.
Their dad was away on business; he was an art dealer that was nicknamed “Blue.” He had to go to Europe where his company was based. Their mum was in the house doing something in the kitchen, possibly cleaning or baking.
There was a bee crossing the lawn where they lay, and it looked for a second like it could’ve gone on forever.
John suddenly said “shall we go ask mum if we can go on an adventure up the fell?”
James said “the day is a good one for an adventure.”
Robert always followed close behind, and said “I’m up for it;” and Flo’ was old enough now to get up the fell on her own; so they went in and asked if they could go on an adventure.
“First pack a picnic,” said mum. She got some biscuits and crisps and sausage rolls and ham sandwiches and a bottle of lemonade ready for them in a rucksack. John was the only one who had a Smartphone because he was old enough to. That way they could ring mum if they got in trouble.
“Are you going to take Ossie?” asked mum.
Ossie was the dog. He liked to run away a lot. If the back door was ever left open he would escape and go sniffing bitches at the local farm. It was embarrassing, whenever it dawned on someone that Ossie had run away, because it meant he was causing trouble at the local farm. It meant they would have to walk up to the farm and get him on a lead and bring him back.
Seeing all the animals at the farm could be frightening for a young child, especially the dogs they kept themselves. Cows were curious creatures and would crowd round with interest when you walked through a field of them, and their being so big it was almost scary, but you could shoo them away very easily, because they were not aggressive by nature.
The family let their fields out to a farmer who kept both cows and sheep on their land, a different farmer from the one where the dog ran off to.
“Yes,” said John. “We’ll take Ossie.”
So they put Ossie the dog on a lead and left the house.
They did not want to go the usual route, through two fields, up the lane, taking a right at the gate, across to the bank of the beck where often they sat and had their packed lunch, because they wanted to explore new territory so they took a left at the gate instead of taking a right. They had honestly never been this way before in all their lives. They walked on a well-beaten path trodden by sheep for a little while then James said to take a turn off the path and into the large fronds of bracken.
It was actually quite difficult to walk through the bracken, so long it was. John held the dog on a short lead. The dog was panting. After twenty minutes they stopped and contemplated going back, but decided against it.
So they walked through bracken that was taller than the tallest of them.
“Watch out for adders,” said John, as they walked, even though he nor any of them had ever seen an adder on the fell. John was the one with the biggest imagination. He liked on Sundays to draw cheques addressed to himself for millions, pen-knives with amazing and ludicrous tools, and maps of strange, far away places. He was into football, as they all were apart from Flo’ who mostly just wanted someone to play dolls with. Still, she had her brothers to follow about.
It was the summer holidays, so they weren’t at school and they were free from doing any schoolwork. If they had been able to see over the bracken they would’ve been able to see the Irish Sea some one mile or so away from the fell. The sea breeze blew up towards them from the West and was cooling them down, a welcome relief in all the summer heat.
They walked, grappling with bracken, slowly. Pushing on they found the bracken opened up to a beautiful spot with a new beck they had never seen before and a clearing beside a small waterfall. The waterfall came off the rock and into a small pool. Flo’ was the first to get her socks and shoes off and paddle in the pool while the boys were busy drinking cupped handfuls of water.
Then the boys took their socks and shoes off too and dangled their feet in the water from the bank. The water was cold but they waded out into it to cool down on such a hot day.
Ossie was allowed off his lead and to swim in the shallow pool. He could be a daft dog sometimes, who was not afraid of water but still afraid of going over a bridge.
As Robert approached the waterfall at the back of the pool, he noted there was a cave behind the waterfall. “Look, there’s a cave!” he said, and everyone else noted and agreed.
“We should check it out,” said John always playing the leader because he was the eldest.
You had to walk under the waterfall and get yourself a little bit wet to get through the water into the cave but it was a hot day so it didn’t matter. They left the picnic on the bank. Into the cave they all went and the dog shook and sent water spraying off him everywhere and their eyes adjusted to the half light and they looked about and guess what they found?
There was a fruit machine, quite rusted and old, parked just inside the entrance of the cave. It looked like it was physically embedded in the fell.
“Imagine if it worked!” said James. James was left handed and very skilful with his hands. He put his hands in his pockets now and found no money. It didn’t matter though because as John said
“there’s no where to plug it in, so we can’t test if it works or not.”
He himself had money, only a few coins, including a few pound coins, in his short pockets. He wore Bermuda shorts as did they all apart from Flo’ who wore a blue and white dress.
They could still hear the waterfall crashing down behind them. Their mum used to say “the sound of running water is very good for the soul,” and it was true, it was.
James now started to press buttons on the fruit machine. Nobody even knew how a fruit machine worked, what to do with one.
“What could that possibly be doing here?” asked little Flo’.
The mystery was a strange one.
“Maybe someone used to live here, a pauper,” said Robert.
James was still fiddling with buttons, trying to get the fruit machine to revolve to three yellow lemons meaning he had hit the jackpot.
They were still just inside the cave enough for there to be daylight leaking in from the outside world, but now John had got the torch on his Smartphone going, and was exploring the back of the cave. Guess what he found?
“There’s
a portal at the back of this cave,” said John. It was like a trap
door that was closed. James was still messing with the buttons on the
fruit machine, and just like that it was as if he had hit the
jackpot, for some combination of buttons he pressed suddenly lit
up and the fruit machine made a musical
sound
and it turned
on a light above the trap door and the trap door slowly opened at
the back of the cave.
There was a tunnel inside!
John
shone his Smartphone torch into the tunnel and they could see at
least a few feet in front of them.
“Should
we go in?” asked Robert.
They
did not know what to do, or what they would find down the tunnel.
“I
dare you to go in there,” said James to John, and
he did, which is why when he’s gone we will all look back on what
is done as a Giant Day.
MUM’S
MEASURING STICK
My
mother
took me out
on
a mother-son bonding trip
-
oh, only down the garden,
to
the
veg
patch, where I,
as
if
gallantly,
dug her a trench,
and
after she planted
her
potatoes, raked it over
again
too. Here she comes now
into
the kitchen, saying
“this
dry weather is good
for
the door,” because
the
door
used
to swell,
because it is wooden,
and
offer much
resistance
to
being
closed.
I
am out of
breath
from working. I
left
the
veg patch first, carrying
two
paper packets in for the sitting
room
fire. I
was in hospital
yesterday
or the day before
after
another O. D. and
don’t
feel up to much work.
Still,
when
mother
says
the
dry weather is good for
the
back door, she might mean
working
with soil is good for the soul.
And
she is mostly right.
She
has a lot of magic sayings
hidden
in the treetops, does mum.
You
can drown in a puddle.
Language
is a creature.
Imagination
is a muscle.
In
politics there are no wrongs
or
rights. Just because someone
is
good to you doesn’t mean
they
are right for you. Actions
have
consequences. The brain
only
heals when it’s asleep
and
even nightmares are
healing.
Giving
makes
you
feel good. Poetry
is not
the
entrance and exit of life.
Of
course she was the one
who
made the flower-press ending
on
cannabis that
might = a dialysis,
and
I was the one that made
the
love poem for Flora
that
might = a motor, and who
spotted
the system, beginning
with
‘if.’
That
system, I would
think
of as my Equilibrium,
but
it is on second thoughts mum’s
Equilibrium.
I don’t like cooking
vegetables
in the kitchen, or digging
in
the vegetable patch after
all.
So
it is that when I sit here ( )
in
the kitchen, because
it has
a
good
table, a good chair,
and
internet
access, writing,
and
mum
comes in to cook, it augments
any
work on Flora’s pretext
if
I just write down what she
says,
about preparing food.
Now
I’ve made mum
a coffee
for
her flask, from the instant
espresso
machine, her second
of
the day, and she has gone
back
out there, to the vegetable
patch,
leaving me indoors.
And
the bluebells are out
and
some have more bells
than
others, but all of them are nice.
And
mother comes back in
with
some layers of clothes removed.
And
the dishwasher is still going
round
and round like dreams
in
the recycling bin. And
mother
goes
back out again, back
to
the veg patch because
her
work is not yet done. And
the
dishwasher has stopped revolving.
And
the
fridge’s drone is heard.
And
in the fridge I have a sausage roll.
And
the sausage roll comes
from
the local butcher and is made
with
real, Cumberland sausage.
And
out
there, the
fresh, spring air
sings
that love is not dead.
MAKING
MY WAY
My
mates want to see what I can D
when
I’ve made sense of the one
where
I am said to havehelpedinventthenet.
I
like the way it kicked in
with
a story for Andrew
after
the vision of the net was had.
Stefanie
wants me to D the government science
but
it seems too long and
too
much like hard work.
Even
when I finish it, bring it up,
they
say it’s not right to publish,
and
so in the end we still deem it
that
to
be the one to meet the mistake
is
a bit shit, but at least
I
also discovered the sheet.
I
was used for the sheet…
this
is why we all agree if
I
am made
to
go Anon something’s gone wrong -
and
if the government maths that helped
invent
the net left a mark
we
all agree something went wrong.
THE
GAME OF MONOPOLY
The
game of Monopoly has hidden places.
Snakes
and ladders isn’t for telepathy.
Dice
changes hands to signify power.
The
business of democracy is as Marx said.
That’s
why Crime
And Punishment
is my favourite book.
It’s
a spiritual or germ X-ray that reveals
the
germs of dictatorship on every hand.
My
father was sponsored by some philosophers
to
provide the real, human witness.
When
I was seven and liked the movie
All
Dogs Go To Heaven
very much,
I
stored the idea of the net in writing
in
the attic to give it a chance to grow and keep it free.
I
am away for the next two weeks on holiday
so
please send your e-mails elsewhere.
You
needn’t be very big to be a good batsman
at
cricket, just look at Sachin Tendulkar.
I
should’ve left the
second
to soak in water but instead
threw
the whole puffer jacket away.
Then
the tear up the front of mine bike -
maths
left over from the rules of Monopoly.
That’s
the one hidden parts can’t allow.
Moving
swiftly on, Rimbaud attained the face.
In
2000 I spoke against September 11th,
wrote
the highest-marked English Literature
A-level
exam essay in the nation, predicted
the
hunt for the God Particle from looking
at
dust in a late ray of light angling
in,
and founded a religion based on the elephant.
Next
up, recording on binaural earphones,
(O
plug my senses in the mains!), the
effervescent
mobile reverberating
the
rhythm of ‘William Tell’ through every
technological
inlet in the room before
it
rang, hosting the white eyebrow
for
a rhythm change in the sea, the tattoo,
hypertext
or sensory overlay of a name
on
Piper,
the purple-bleeding screen,
the
Tower as an instrument of philosophy,
the
tape I cooked in the AGA when
its
small pause where cut and resealed
in
the reel finally healed and was gone,
and
then I was the man to discover my brother’s
sheet
where pictures (seemingly depicting
my
own song lyric) grew, brown and blue,
as
if the work of Winnie the Pooh.
If
these latter things are numbers, I
also
invented a new and impossible one:
the
Nirvana barcode I made to be
but
the beat of ‘Scentless Apprentice’ by
Nirvana
tapped out in approximate barcode
shape
using the tool of the qwerty keyboard.
IN
THE MIDDLE OF THINGS
Who
is in the writing team?
I
am for sure. With my massive brain.
But
there’s also James, deft
left
hand born of another
and
who designed the sheet
where
pictures grew.
Then
there’s Dr. Robert
with
his New Beat PHD in English…
he
has a family now, three boys
and
is married to C.
She
herself was a biology PHD.
You’ve
also got Hannah…
Hannah
hopes
the whole thing only
goes
on in the happy world of Haribo;
says
once you renounce Starbucks
cool,
new shit can happen.
She
says of my work that wall is shit.
Her
daughter is Florence
and
her husband is Seb -
who
works in design, is Australian
and
in many ways is the most interesting.
So
that’s the team – but
there’s
also my mum.
She
made a flower-press ending
on
cannabis for my dad; has
also
been known to “do the beck”
in
her poems by writing,
discretely,
off the top of her head.
AFTERWORD
FROM
‘TRANSITION TO PHILOSOPHY VOLUME THREE’
Pollen.
The one thing missing is pollen. My father retired here and smoked
pollen, drifted, at this monastic retreat, this spiritual tonic. I
say that is the only difference between him and I but by the time he
was my age he had four children in private school, two houses owned
outright (one in London NW6, and this one where I am now in the
north), also two cars, and enough money to retire on. I have next to
nothing compared with him even though he only ever wanted better
outcomes for his children than he got for himself. And
I think my pollen-smoking days are over.
Granted
that the Transition to Philosophy has been made now, what were its
causes? Living with mental illness in the sticks is difficult. Trying
to be a poet on top of it is even harder, and
it
is made even harder again if you don’t know a single person that
reads your poetry. I’m not going to rule it out because I would
never rule out poetry just wake from the false economy of it all.
Instead I get to structure my free time, my convalescence, by saying
I need to read Spinoza (because he too was cursed) and also need to
move on from Wittgenstein to Quine (who is more recent). That
seems like pragmatic thinking, to structure my surfeit of leisure.
I
just think living here, a slowed down pursuit is in order. We are far
from the accelerated postmodern
lifestyle,
and though consumer culture does touch us in little ways, we exist in
a nuclear-proof bubble of bucolic beauty that lends itself happily to
philosophical contemplation. It
means that I think I have actually made the right decision in
selecting philosophy for a lifetime’s pursuit now, even though it
bores my sister rigid. It used to bore me rigid too! If ever I picked
up a compendium of European philosophers and looked in the Contents
page, furthermore, I would look at the listed
indigenous
philosophers as somehow lesser to the Continental ones, and think to
myself that maybe one day I could, if not create an immanent, Kantian
tradition in England, then at least maybe write a book of philosophy
as good as John Barnes’s goal against Brazil. It’s hard and
necessarily so. I find with a life story like mine, which I needn’t
go into again, there is a balancing out, democratic mechanism that
stops you “winning.” I always respected my dad’s choice of
degree, anyhow, and envied my friends who knew more about philosophy
than I did, because I chose to pursue English Literature and Creative
Writing. I
guess to be making or to have made a transition to philosophy from
the Liberal Arts is a dream come true, but I am still as yet to
receive any feedback apart from in voices that I keep hearing.
If
I were to go up to the attic and could locate dad’s files from his
undergraduate days, which still exist, I would be bombarded with
hyper-specialised terminology, nomenclature, technical terms that
remain beyond me. This I find disappointing because as a reader
visiting philosophy intermittently down the years, I don’t expect
the writer to be slacking. I don’t expect an endless license for
pub speak, or what my father called “latitudes for bullshit.”
There would need be some precision and exactitude. There would need
be some clarity. Even if I don’t understand the language of Logical
Symbolism very well, I still provided that, or showed promise, when I
ideated and falsified the Nirvana barcode.
I
make some tea and think about things and wonder if it is simply too
much to ask someone with my mental health issues to produce beautiful
work. I know I had a breakdown and was hospitalised during my degree
but still pushed on to get my degree before there was any diagnosis
given. If I look back at my degree, from before the diagnosis, I see
a lot of beautiful and promising work. If it hadn’t been for the
diagnosis I might’ve extended my undergraduate dissertation on the
work of David Morley (a gyp scientist-poet) into a whole book; and I
might also have written a similar book of criticism on The
Lords And The New Creatures
by Jim Morrison except
without telling anyone that I was the bleeding witness! These
would still seem like good books but I fear it is too late because of
the books I have put out there in illness and
also because I have let my skill-set slide into disarray and
dissipation.
Further
ideas for books were multifarious and I never got any of them done.
When dad was still around he fed me ideas. I also had ideas myself
that might’ve been approached somewhere in the epic data-tree of it
all but were never finalised. So the question remains as to whether
or not someone with mental illness like mine can even produce a great
work. On the course Dr. George Green said to me once “survivors can
only write a scream,” but I take issue with this because some of
the best poets of all time had mental health issues, including Blake,
John Clare, Allen Ginsberg, Robert Lowell, James Schuyler of the New
York School, and more.
In
my dissertation on David Morley I interviewed the poet in question on
whom the dissertation was about and we discussed in part whether or
not writing is therapy. He said there is more to it than that; he
conceded that writing can be physiological, like a kick, that heals
you – but as I say said there is more to writing than mere therapy.
You get that back then I was doing it because I thought I was doing
good, saturated as I was by all the reading, head full of ideas that
were driving me insane as Bob Dylan sang – and if it has changed,
if I am no longer doing good, the change has crept up on me
un-noticed. I was the likeliest guy in my year to attain a modicum of
academic success, towards the end of my degree, but now it seems
beyond me, and I also have this terrible backlog of messy plates, so
to speak, meaning the self-publications and vanity-press publications
that only demean my own name. It’s like the situation can’t be
fixed unless I snap to and make a work that gets published through
normal and formal means. I would
love to have written, say, a book of criticism on the work of David
Morley – and my dissertation was a good start. I would also love to
have written a book of criticism on The
Lords And The New Creatures,
without giving the game away,
and again, after my degree and before my diagnosis made a good start
(though the document I mean was like the rest of them, wasted on dead
computers in the end.)
My
dad’s ideas for books for me included
walking in a circle around the Lakes; included exploring the origin
of Liverpool F. C. football songs in pubs and gutters; included
a campus novel where a Muslim is being watched by the State and a
breakthrough in nuclear fusion is suppressed for monetary reasons.
Around the time of my degree I was on fire, and one idea was for a
book called Action Thriller where you cut up an action thriller into
many pieces and make an action painting a la Jackson Pollock at your
screen and still call it “Action Thriller.” I started that one
but never finished it. I had a radio play once about some voices
contemplating changing the word “life” to “knife.” I also
started a real play where the auditorium was a skull and the actors
on stage thoughts. I actually had 100’s of fairly decent ideas and
a lot of innate ability and know how but the mental illness really
has stopped me from doing anything properly. My
brother Dr. Robert had the idea for me (seeing as I was at the time
an English Literature boffin) to write as many sonnets as Shakespeare
– 154 – and I did – and it was self-published on Amazon – but
to tell you the truth by the time I did that, there was only really
one good sonnet in the whole book. It wasn’t the first time I had
tried that number, but the third. The first time I tried it I went
over the limit and did double the amount. I sent the first 154 to a
publisher and he said it was “commendable but I won’t be able to
sell it.” You have to remember these publishers are a business.
Dr.
Bob is always telling me “poetry is a dead art form – do
something contemporary instead.” I suppose it could be the NFT
Haiku, then. Well, without making them Non-fungible tokens as such, I
did recently submit all my best miniaturist poems to photographic
backgrounds and made a set of about fifteen… I probably told you
this already. My ex gf put a *loveheart* symbol by all apart from two
on FB, so I guess to make that connection is a good thing, but it’s
nothing srs compared with a transition to philosophy. What you might
remark on is that the transition means producing something even more
obtuse, purist, obscure – as if I were migrating in the wrong
direction! The whole business of this transition comes back to the
question of whether I can still produce good work with the mental
illness I have or whether it is now beyond me. I think the illness
might make you even more sincerely devoted to the idea of producing
good work than ever before, but carrying it out in practice becomes
difficult. And I’ve got all these books out now which only a few
years ago I hadn’t, and I don’t feel like I have started while
people will tell me I have done enough! My
Cognitive Behaviour Therapist, though dyslexic, asked me to loan her
one of my books, and I don’t know which one to give her. That’s a
sign that none of them are any good. She wants to look into them to
understand my illness better. I’m either going to opt for
Soundcloud
Rain (where
my songs were structured according to <BEE>) and The
Sunset Child
(my seven year old book that underwrote the net); or I am going to
give her the much more recent first volume of Transition
To Philosophy
– which at least came from within!
I
need support to know I am doing the right thing in trying to make a
transition to philosophy. It’s not like I know how to write
“logical papers.” I think I’ve been too greedy and yet can’t
isolate one good thing I have done. There hasn’t been any “help”
from a corridor or department. I’ve just been diagnosed and left
alone to do what I will. My friends that actually read philosophy or
some psychology at Oxbridge all got help with funding for an MA and
some a PHD and went into neuro-science or psychiatry. I didn’t get
help because my family’s money ran out on school fees. My dad sold
the second house (in London) and moved us up here permanently and
they still ran out of money on school fees. What I contest myself is
that there is no limit imposed on me and my spare time continuum, my
lucking in with this piece of string length period of reflective
time. I have that is nothing to do and a wonderfully bucolic place in
which to do it too. There must be some limit. And here I am reminded
that Man will always create work even if there is none available.
Like here, we would move an unused pile of rubble and next week move
it back. Dad was always getting us to do things like that. There was
a summer, furthermore, when pollen became a currency in an atemporal
microcosm as if he were setting up a Republic at the foot of the fell
where the Plough alignment is viable!
I
mention pollen but it would do me and my mental illness no good in
all likelihood if I got back into smoking. By the time he was my age
my father had sent his children off to boarding school and had enough
free time to smoke it. It
went hand in hand with his being an original hippy… he was that is
an original hippy in the 60’s and after University hitched twice
across the States. He travelled far and wide. He cherished chance
encounter. He talked to anyone, at any station in life. I miss the
guy sometimes. What would he say though about my philosophy? He would
suggest I am sure that in not studying it at University, I am wasting
my time. Even so, by now I have probably read more philosophy than he
ever did. But I never had to attend lectures or seminars or get by on
a course.
I
think you can tell that even when I try and make the transition to
philosophy I still behave as a poet in my speech. I can’t
extrapolate where the curve tends for me next. I heard it said there
is “no literary heartbeat in Cumbria.” Norman Nicholson was
alright because he was arch-Conservative and found publication
opportunity with another arch-Conservative, T. S. Eliot, at Faber. I
don’t think, though, that there is a single poetry press in
Cumbria, which is said to be the most poetically inspiring county we
have – so this is a very sad thing. Professor
Paul Farley of Lancaster University writes of selling timeshare at a
place “where the sex-lines terminate,” but that (he says) is
elsewhere. I notice in telling you this my memory is intact and some
of what I read still sticks even if it was a long time ago. But the
question remains as to whether or not any good writing can come from
someone sooooooooooo mentally ill. We might also reconfigure the
question w/r/t/ place: can any good writing come from a situation of
isolation in the countryside where you never see anyone else apart
from your housemates, never go anywhere, never attend a reading for
example?
City-life
might be a hive of alienation but can also energise good writing.
Here in the countryside, the writing life grows repetitive. I
literally dream of beautiful papers at night and all of them are
beyond my reach, my education, and probably my ability too. This is
tragic, or at least saddening. I
may need to just “write stuff” while I accommodate the death of
my poetry. As Freud says the pleasure principle goes out into the
world with the nose of a clown and finds the reality principle. Same
for a poet who dreams of starting a new religion or a Revolution, or
even a movement, or even publishing a manifesto from a school of
thought. He learns the hard way that it is likely not going to be
possible.
Now
I suppose I will go to bed and read of Wittgenstein. Even when you
have nothing to do with your time and are signed off work with mental
illness, you still have to go to bed – and that can be the hardest
thing, the most depressing thing, because it is still right that you
should get up in the morning, not stay awake all night.
WITH
RIGHTS COME RESPONSIBILITIES
I
know a man, let’s
call him Henry, spoke
against September 11th
in 2000, who was therefore raped when it still
happened.
Everything from the same conversation also started to come true…
his own idea to invent binaural earphones on which to record his
music was “implemented” by another guy. Same
for his idea for a book. In 2001 he was in a band, recording on
earphones with the rich guy that implemented the idea… they tried
to dress Henry up to look like Hitler, pretended the spliff was his
bifter, treated him like a living art installation. He didn’t even
get to mention that the earphones were his own idea to invent. This
is because when the Towers fell down he was therefore raped; and this
manifested as a burning feeling in the psyche; and when he suppressed
the burning feeling in order to function he lost all memory of the
conversation in the barn in 2000 where he had shown prescience. The
formative years of his life were spent under these conditions.
When
he finally got out of the bad landscape, came home to the Lakes, he
was placed under a curse by a maniac.
Things
didn’t go well for him ever after. He became acutely ill, which
some close to him believe dates back to the rich man that implemented
the idea to invent the earphones. This rich man, he would never need
work a day, and at the end of the band swanned off with all his money
to have a happy life
whilst
Henry
was rendered destitute. So as I say Henry went home to the Lakes and
was cursed. He became acutely ill. After becoming ill, there was an
attempt at his life in his sleep – or what seemed to be one –
which turned out to be an operation to give him a new member! Oh, it
worked for ten minutes. Then the fire-dance blamed it on Henry even
though he didn’t know it was going on or when he found out
participate. Then when his dad died they all made him go for a naked
walk when he was in a broken state.
More
recently his files were hacked and being read out online… Henry’s
brother caught them at it and said, on live streaming, “it all went
wrong for Henry with that richman’s mum.” Henry walked past his
brother’s room when this was said, thought his brother had meant
the rich guy’s literal mother, and that it was the richman’s
mother who had made an attempt at his life – so he got on to FB and
gave the rich man Hell.
He
wasn’t sure what happened then, on FB, but he was so insulting to
the rich man and his mother that their friendship will never recover.
Now, after a recent O. D. attempt “Henry” has also lost the
ability to ejaculate. He thinks it is the rich man’s influence.
The
problem Henry found in pinning the Hitler moustache to his so-called
mates was that in the band he had a lyric going “I’m going to get
your freshness back, plug my senses in the mains, it’s just a
blood-rush to my brains, I’m going to get pretty much fucked up,
flee the world on a midnight plane, dance with the aliens and the
insane.” Indeed,
Henry, made to look ersatz by his band, was in a world without
Rights. His doctor told him he looked “a blur.”
Throughout
it all Henry was going through a personal crisis about not knowing
whether or not he was gay.
He
would break down in tears and say “I think I’m gay.” While it
was true that he foresaw September 11th
and couldn’t remember, he was at the time never gay. He may have
thought he was built like Adonis while actually being a munter, but
he wasn’t dim. They may have deemed him to be dim, but when he was
in the zone, he wrote the highest-marked A-level exam essay in the
nation. That
may be part of being a savant. He was actually diagnosed autistic
relatively
recently and
is now stuck with it.
If
the police
ever
come for him that’s what we’ll say – “he isn’t here.”
MATTEO’S
APHORISM
“To
be a philosopher you need to face up to life.”
And
for the aphorism I cite the reference of my brother’s little boy…
there I was trying to wrestle, to grapple with some of the things
that left me wounded – the hurt – and when it was done,
overheard, in a busy house, my little brother’s little
boy’s aphorism.
I
don’t know if I can use it but it’s the right thing to say at the
right time. It
shows that we are all sharing. It shows that all papers are part of
the same book. It’s a good job the young ‘un piped up because
otherwise I wouldn’t have been on a philosophical path. So my own
brother thinks that even though I have opted not to pass on my genes,
it is the younger generation that ages us and makes us sages. Even
though they are playing with Playdough they make us wise. Just for a
minute it’s the
young lad Matteo’s
text. This is why they don’t like it when at the end because of all
the unique experiences I went through I can’t share it and it’s
all mine!
ENOUGH
THANK GOD
Again
young Madame is with us -
and
has taken to me, an ugly brute,
because
I played tea set with her, sipping
tea
from miniature empty cups.
Little
bay Flo’ has no lyrical bedtime
but
is tucked up safe and sound now.
This
should be her father writing
but
alas it is me, occupying
the screen.
The
day has been a rather hot one,
and
I have taken to dad’s old office
because
it’s cool and also tidy now.
I
picked 8 books off the groaning shelves,
including
Quine, which I might like.
When
you mix technological advance
with
linguistic change what do you get?
You
get me sitting here writing,
amazed
at the innocence of the children.
It
was the first time I played tea set
and
I am looking forward to playing
football
with the boys on the beach.
SUMMARY
ON A SUMMER EVENING
The
best bits of my philosophy book were:
(1)
when I read Descartes on perfection and turn inward my eye to
investigate I glimpse a perfect, inner judge whose concerns are
grammatical.
(2)
when I read Saul A. Kripke on persuading a sceptic that by “plus”
he doesn’t mean “quus,” I think of my seven year old book where
I wrote “I have a scar+ that is red and black,” using a + sign
for the ‘f’ of scarf.
(3)
when I read Wittgenstein’s Philosophical
Investigations,
I recall a state of relational undoing I got into in my bed as a boy,
where I would close my eyes, or get under the cover and lose the
room, forget which way I am lying, where the wall is, lose all
orientation and what a delight it was.
Off
the top of my head that’s all I can remember but it went on for a
long time in a similar vein.
YOU
DON’T NEED A MANSION IF YOU ARE FOR REAL
To
the one who says
I
should be writing
about
mind cancer
because
my mum is blue
you
might find that
even
though she is blue
there
is still a bed for you
whomsoever
you are
whenever
you need it
at
the foot of Sea Ness.
LOOKING
BACK
Looking
back, I think how from different
parts
of the country, we could be heard
to
resound around and me the centre, mixing
megalomania
and paranoia like they’re the same…
we
gave teamwriting a good go, but
so
many hot topics were off the playlist,
the
way the living spreadsheet was a monster,
the
way the maths of the new colour
could
underwrite cancer gnawing
at
your genome or was it undermine?
Instead
we fell to ideals of family,
ideals
like friendship and Night
by
which we mean love. We have shared
some
cracking meals and cracking times,
and
now the younger generation are upon us,
who
will hopefully grow up to look back too.

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