Something happened in her childhood, she said.
Now, at 20, she feels empty.
But makes money in bed.
Something happened in her childhood, she said.
Now, at 20, she feels empty.
But makes money in bed.
On being stung by a large Bumblebee
On a part you will never see!
I jumped in the water
With the vicar’s pretty daughter,
Who was nude as nude can be!
I recently did a reading of my poetry at The Royal Albert Pub in Crystal Palace. You don’t need a TikTok account to watch the reading.
PART ONE:
PART TWO:
Engrossed in their flirtatious play
They stand behind the bar.
The place is quiet for a summer’s evening.
I am near, and yet so far away.
Soon I will be leaving
Him and her together.
I finish my pint and leave alone.
Later, at home, I think on Larkin,
And whether they sleep together.
Its not my affair
But the poet’s indelicate question
Intrudes into my rhyme
Of lost youth and passing time.
A young lady said to me, “Kevin!
At 7 I’ll send you to heaven!”.
Her name is Miss Sun
And she’s waving a gun,
And the clock it is nearing 7!
When a vampire whose name is Kate
Kidnapped me on an evening very late,
I found myself in the gloom
Of a musty old tomb,
With the actor who was dating Kate!
Were I to die under a bus
Family and friends would cry.
There would be little fuss
Over my literary legacy.
Those few who read my rhyme
Of women and wine
and passing time
May fancy they hear
Skeletons prattle in cupboards
And clocks stop.
But I will not reply
We run.
Perchance dance in the sun.
But behind the sunlight
We know the night
Will come
And our fleeting pleasure
Must end in dust.
I am delighted to announce that my collection of poems “The Churchyard Yew and Other Poems” is available on Amazon in Kindle format. The Paperback should be available in the next couple of days, and I will post links to it once the book goes live.
The photograph on the book cover shows the churchyard of St John the Evangelists Church in Upper Norwood. The photograph was taken by my friend Michelle Whiteside.
The book description reads as follows:
A miscellany of poems about nature, passing time and relationships.
If you read “The Churchyard Yew” please do consider reading a review on Amazon.
For the UK
For the US