Some people are sclerotic
Some people are sclerotic
They sit as still as the dummies
In shop windows
For hours
All wrapped up and
Overdressed if you ask me
The heat rises off them.
Mouldy pants vapourise
As they sit
Gazing out into a world
They were once part of.
Some have sclerosis,
From before,
When they partied for England
Or any damn place they pleased
Come to think.
In the residential home,
The carers put a candle in a muffin
Sing Happy Birthday
Tunelessly
And then leave.
The sclerotics just keep staring
Out into the blue
Waiting.
Bill worries that he is becoming
More sclerotic by the day
He is jaundiced
And the liquor refuses to stay down
But at least he moves around.
From time to time
He finds himself outside
On the grass
Nursing a sore head
With Nancy,
A floosie is what his mother would have said
But she has a good heart
He has seen it
Pinned to her sleeve.
She dabs at tears with the corner
Of a white lace hanky
And together they smooch on the bed
Share a quart of whisky
Get high on fumes.
He will not go easy
As the old poem goes
Not that he has much time for
Complex drinking,
It is all he can do
To get his head around
Waking up in the morning.
He often asks himself
How old he had been
When he first realised
That he was never going to be famous.
Perhaps it was when
He began to take a lunchbox
In to work
And ate cheese and pickle sandwiches
At his desk
Writing poetry on a napkin
Stuffing it in a drawer.
Nancy said he could still show
The kids a thing or two
About performing.
Bill thinks she was rude
But liked to fool himself
She was considering his prospects
As a dog-eared laureate,
Once he found a way
To eulogise old age
With world-weary charm
And get through a day
Without
Climbing all the way
Into the bottle
He kept
Hidden in a brown paper bag.