LIFESCAPES
   Poems by Pam Crane
   Copyright 2017 Pam Crane
   Thank you for downloading this free ebook.
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   MATURITY
   IRON
   In the crust of a thousand islands,
   In the rocks and the dust of Mars,
   In the core of a whirling planet,
   In the breath of a billion stars 
   The metal of Man was waiting
   For a brain and a thumb and fire.
   An age of history-making
   Began with naked desire;
   Firing, hammering, honing,
   Ready for food and foe,
   Blade and spear in the forest
   To swing, to thrust, to throw.
   Mankind has harvested iron,
   Harnessed its weight for war,
   Hard in the mouths of horses,
   Strong on the fortress door;
   Melting, moulding and casting
   Cauldron, helmet and chain,
   Armour against the weapon,
   Shield to carry the slain.
   Hoops for the cooper’s barrel,
   Rim for the carter’s wheel -
   And then the gun. And the girder.
   Man has discovered steel.
   With steel he plunders the planet.
   With steel he murders the trees.
   With steel he conquers his neighbour ...
   But loses to Heart disease.
   The crust of the whirling planet
   Is left with the rust of war,
   Waiting for souls to ripen
   Just as it was before.
   Forward to Index
   MY CAMPAIGN
   Roll up! Roll up! And vote for me,
   This rare day of democracy!
   Your Independent candidate
   Is up for vigorous debate
   On any issue - you may pick it;
   I shall add it to my ticket.
   Join me! Wear my fine rosette!
   I found these on the internet,
   The symbolism quite apparent -
   Frills and ribbons all transparent.
   My platform? I am anti-greed.
   ‘To each according to his need.’
   So - nurses’ wages? They must rise;
   That should come as no surprise.
   I am also on the ball
   With soccer - salaries must fall
   To where they were back in the day
   When games were televised in grey;
   The pricey foreigners must go
   So local lads can run the show.
   Then we can all afford to cheer
   Our teams three dozen times a year!
   The beating heart of my campaign
   Is second homes. Let me explain,
   That only for a licence fee
   In this corrupt economy
   Should anyone at all be given
   More than a single house to live in.
   After somewhere nice to stay
   With kids or friends on holiday?
   You’ll have to rough it like the rest
   Of us, and be a hotel guest.
   Open the villages again
   To local folk and working men!
   My logo is a garden gnome:
   “Make every house a proper home.”
   Still on the theme of rural life,
   One phrase that cuts me like a knife
   Is “National Park.” A park’s for play.
   We’re throwing peace and space away,
   Granting the ignorant permission
   To tramp the wild into submission.
   I’ll curb the greedy National Trust,
   Stop all the farms from going bust,
   Punish the waste of food, and pull
   Strings to revive the trade in wool.
   (... Remember the verses on the bus
   And tube that once delighted us?
   When Brummel Beau, the swell of swells
   Electrified the Brighton Belles,
   The Prince would hover in the offing,
   Killing romance with fits of coughing.
   ‘Another cold, Sire? Listen do!
   To be well-dressed be wool-dressed too!
   In elegance it is the rule,
   There is no substitute for Wool!’)
   We must control our lust for oil,
   Return the plough-horse to the soil.
   Spread the forests, marsh and heath,
   Meadow and moor, till we can breathe.
   I can see progress here and there,
   But people need another scare -
   We’re seeing fewer plastic-trees
   Yet micro-beads are in the seas
   And particles lodged in the brain
   May drive us secretly insane.
   Is our poisoned air why we
   Deny the world’s divinity?...
   I’ll fight the rising tide of noise
   From shrieking girls and fighting boys;
   The clubs and bars will close at ten,
   And we can get some sleep again...
   Under a blazing Milky Way
   Once light is limited to day.
   No fireworks may be lit before
   November 5th; I’m waging war
   On every huge exploding shell
   That turns an evening into hell
   For those with post-traumatic stress,
   And trembling pets. The friendliness
   Of toffee-apples round the fire,
   Sooty potatoes, rockets higher
   Than stars, and flowers of coloured light
   Are joys enough on Fireworks Night.
   And those who wind their windows down
   To blast their ‘music’ through the town
   And all who leave their engines running
   For ages at the kerb, I’m gunning
   For you! You shake the old, the ill,
   The tired - I’ll force you to keep still.
   Many end up on a ward,
   Sick or broken, stressed and bored.
   On my watch, to help us heal
   We shall feast at every meal.
   Morale will soar - and if we get a
   Smile as well, we’ll soon be better!
   Prevention always trumps a cure;
   In Whitehall thrift has great allure:
   I’ll save the NHS a packet,
   Ruining Big Pharma’s racket.
   Garlic scrips at fifty pee,
   Will keep the country virus-free.
   (You take it raw, with lots of food.
   It does your blood and body good.)
   And when you go to see the Doc
   He won’t be looking at the clock
   And neither will your daily carer -
   Pay and practice must be fairer.
   Nobody should lie all day
   Unloved until they waste away.
   Roll up! Roll up and vote for me!
   I’ll do my best as your MP
   To purge pollution, waste and lies;
   Let’s save the world before it dies.  
   Forward to Index
   1PARTY GAMES
   Fondly I remember party games,
   Tests of character with simple names.
   Any joiner-in could take a punt
   At statues, spin the bottle, treasure hunt,
   Bingo, pass the parcel, blind man’s buff,
   Fielding twenty questions off the cuff;
   Murder in the dark, musical chairs,
   And playing sardines underneath the stairs.
   Oh, how times have changed! Our parties now
   Hunt down the blind and frail who find out how
   To play the system so that they can eat.
   They spin the news, they pass the buck, they cheat,
   And twenty questions is a bland parade
					     					 			r />   Of policy, an insincere charade.
   In the House they fight for every chair;
   Murdered ideals are buried everywhere.
   Forward to Index
   HEROES
   We are the Heroes
   All we need to do
   Is fly straight perish in fire
   Paradise waiting
   Islands and cities
   Full of mistaken people
   Chosen for Heaven
   One man with a gun
   And a beautiful bomb smiles at
   His own Jihad
   Glorious weather
   To start a war by shedding
   The blood of children
   Souls of the broken
   Stare at the tears and courage
   Uncomprehending
   No happier day
   To pack a rucksack and break
   The heart of London
   Deep in shattered dreams
   New shoes kick the enemy
   Old men are weeping
   A perfect weekend
   For boys in the hood to run
   Looting and burning
   Not the rescuers
   Dying to save a stranger
   Nor the blind climber
   Not the lovely boy
   He and the bomb dismantled
   Nor burning daughters
   Not the Red Arrow
   Who wrenched his plummeting plane
   Away from houses
   Not aching nurses
   Mothers of empty children
   Nor weeping Jesus
   God in our pocket
   We are the right men always
   We are the Heroes
   Forward to Index
   PARADISE LOST
   (a Villanelle)
   Yesterday you joined us on the summer sand,
   Girls in bikinis, tiny children running bare,
   You in a bomb-belt, Kalashnikov in hand.
   Our simple heaven shattered in a foreign land,
   The debris of your holy visit everywhere.
   Yesterday you joined us on the summer sand.
   In the only Paradise you understand
   Naked houris waited for your beck and call -
   You in a bomb-belt, Kalashnikov in hand -
   But your black leaders lovely lies have slain you, and
   There will be no Garden, no reward at all.
   Yesterday you joined us on the summer sand;
   In that moment nothing happened as you planned.
   The hand of God reached down for us and left you there,
   You in a bomb-belt, Kalashnikov in hand.
   In that love which makes our butchered children whole
   Is there forgiveness for your naked, broken soul?
   Yesterday you joined us on the summer sand
   You in a bomb-belt, Kalashnikov in hand.
   Forward to Index
   PARADES
   I love parades. I love the noise
   The dancing girls the laughing boys
   The frocks as white as snowy May
   To celebrate Our Lady’s Day
   I hate parades. I hate the noise
   The new regime’s expensive toys
   The endless rhythmic martial tread
   Annual insult to the dead
   I love parades. I love the crowd
   The shouts the whistling out and proud
   The rainbow flags the sexy gear
   We’ve made it through another year 
   I hate parades. I hate the crowd
   The pipes are shrill the drums too loud
   And symbols clash in every street
   As old intolerances meet
   I love parades. I love the smells
   Of food and animals the bells
   On circus horses scary clowns
   When wonder comes to sleepy towns
   I hate parades. I hate the smells
   Of men emerging from their cells
   Waste of body and waste of mind
   Bury the lives we left behind
   I love parades. I love the weather
   We freeze and fry and drown together
   To watch a smiling Queen go by
   And try to catch a guardsman’s eye
   I hate parades. I hate the weather
   Shivering sweating in serge and leather
   One day we’ll be the men in braid
   Now it’s a passing-out parade
   I love parades I hate parades
   Stories written in cavalcades
   The year has turned and here we come
   Who will march to a different drum?
   Forward to Index
   GAIA’S LAMENT
   When am I to be free of men?
   Feel the breath of the stars again? 
   Welcome again a crystal sea
   To pulse and rhyme with the heart of me?
   Men are piercing me for my oil,
   Scarring me with their pits and spoil,
   Torching the trees that make the air,
   Spreading their poison everywhere.
   The fading life in my ocean feeds
   On deadly invisible plastic beads.
   These will return to choke the men
   Who foul the air and the waves - but when?
   I whip and I whip their selfish hide,
   I spin the winds, I churn the tide,
   I crack the cities with men inside
   For all the loveliness that died.
   When will the polar snows return?
   When will the jungles cease to burn?
   When at last will the only roads
   Be the secret tracks of elk and toads?
   I long for the day Cheyenne and Sioux
   Can do again what they love to do,
   Buffalo graze on a bracing plain,
   Waters flashing with fish again.
   When will the billions learn to be
   Grateful, careful and kind to me?
   When will they honour the Earth, their mother?
   I die - they die. They have no other.
   Every battle between my sons
   Has wounded me with the bombs and guns.
   Oh friendly meteors, aim for me
   And put me out of my misery!
   The slums and towers will all be dust,
   Ambition will end in bone and rust;
   Shocked souls will cry for pardon - then
   I shall indeed be free ... oh, when?
   Forward to Index
   LABOUR
   He voted Labour all his life, 
   your Dad.
   I was a loving, loyal wife
   And glad
   To put my cross by the same candidate
   Then wait
   Watching TV in the crowded bar
   By the pithead, sinking jar after jar
   Till the results were in
   And we knew
   Which side would win
   And who
   Have to
   Take defeat on the chin.
   This time it was Thatcher.
   Among the posh Tory men
   None could match her
   Smart, pearled
   Vehement
   Acumen.
   She took us on.
   In her blue eyes our blackened world
   Of slag and seam,
   Of red flags unfurled,
   Was alien,
   Spent;
   Our time had gone,
   Dismissed like a bad dream;
   The mines had had their day,
   They would no longer pay.
   And we of the tin baths and the tin hats
   Who toiled in blackness on the brightest day,
   Whose men clocked up miles in cages not cars,
   With scars
   From rockfall, pick-axe, truck and buried friends,
   We were like rats
   To be rid of by brute means for Tory ends.
   Oh,
   The mines would go.
   Not clean,
   Not green,
   Old King Coal was dead.
   The wh 
					     					 			eels would stop at every pithead,
   And soon there would be nothing to be seen
   Of where we had been,
   Nothing to show
   For centuries of hard labour below.
   Then came 
   King Arthur.
   Labour to the core
   And one of us, a husband and a father -
   And more,
   He courted fame:
   He rallied our communities for war.
   How could we know
   Scargill would let us starve?
   That slow
   And bitter year
   The government would halve
   Our meagre benefits;
   There would be no
   Help from the Miners’ Union for the poor
   Surviving on our wits,
   On fags and beer.
   And how could we know
   The misery in store at striking pits?
   Hectored men would go
   Desperate for a little Union pay
   Onto the picket lines
   Day after day
   Believing this would somehow save the mines;
   There they would stay
   Despite the broken hand, the bloody nose,
   Taunting the Right,
   Keeping the scabs at bay.
   Braving fight after fight,
   Arrests and fines,
   Under the scrawled signs
   Life-long friends coming to blows
   Over the side they chose.
   And how could we know
   After the charging horses,
   Black police
   And bloodied batons, and the riot shields
   In ugly deployment of national resources
   To keep the peace;
   After our lives became a TV show,
   Our banners headlines,
   How could we know the mines
   Would soon revert to ruins in the fields,
   The wild take back our spoil
   And at terrible cost
   Our loved labour lost 
   To gas, to oil?
   Three decades on,
   Son,
   Your Dad has gone.
   And there’s no coal 
   And there’s no soul
   In this damned coalition.
   Thousands went in and then came out of prison;
   All that pain
   Was utterly in vain.
   The Tories won.
   The pithead wheels are rusting in the rain,
   The talk is all 
   Of tide and wind and sun
   And Labour has broken with the Union.
   You’ll try again
   To roll back time - but this is a strange
   World caught up in climate change.
   Each warring party goes by its old name