I stagger
I stagger
Under the weight of the sky,
The drizzle of rain
A constant,
As the moon burns
In the hollow
Of a cloud
A tallowed candle
Spluttering toward death.
There is a smell of poverty
In the waiting room
Lumpy people
Grumpy old souls
Plumb coloured tongues
With sour breath
Sorry storied
Struck out on luck
Sitting in silence
Piles of dirty sacks
Stained full of rot
And sadness
Waiting for oblivion
As cold as it ever was.
I am thankful for safety,
I wonder about seat 11A,
The weight of survival
Measured in guilt
Carried forward.
There is never enough grief
Sadness is always waiting to claim
The unwary
Self-blame is endless.
A sunken-faced inspector calls
The time,
His trousers are too loose.
He is the incredible
Shrinking man
Perhaps he has cancer
Or a wasting disease.
The policeman
In the high-viz yellow vest
Has eaten all the pies
I don’t like his apples.
He fills the door
With rancour
Eclipsing the light.
He uses a baton
To poke the sleeping
The dead don’t move.
He has done it before
And carries himself
In expectation.
I hope he is wrong
And pray for the safe return
Of all who seek asylum.
Not that I’m a patron saint
But death in a bus depot
Is a sad end
For anybody
With no home to go to.