6th June Commuter

Arms rusty, folded, resting
Cross-legged on the soft swell of a middle aged paunch,
A long term construction project,
Facilitated by fried breakfast, brunch and lunch,
I bet you could put your ear to his belly button
And hear the sea whooshing,
I tell the lady next to me, who lowers her paper
And starts shushing.

Fair and pale hair dusts his head,
Just like Salt flakes on a winter road
Or baking soda in a mixing bowl,
A swimming cap snapped onto Mount Fuji
Stained slightly pink from the rosy scalp beneath,
A garland of snowy feathers worn like a winners wreath.

Stop being so hifalutin,
You can’t write like that about someone probably called Keith.
Good grief.

Ahem. He wears a workers tan with ease,
It’s neither a milky tea brown nor a sterling brick red
But more of a vicious maroon from
The lower shins peeping above his socks to the top of his head,
And strangely, it’s the same colour as his tshirt,
Which must be size XL,
Or stretchy and made from 100% cotton thread.
Tight on the arms, kiss puckered lips,
Never enough ketchup to cover the chips
Avocado skin creases cover tattoos
Of snakes and daggers,
Of topless girls and curvy ship anchors
Of construction tools and business loans turned down by bankers.
They’re all faded coffee stains now,
blurry and indistinct,
Something interesting at the bottom of a muddy stream,
Close your eyes and imagine what they could have been.

3rd June Commuter

Are those the sort of glasses that
Change from light to dark,
Depending on the light and the dark?
And if they are, I need to ask,
How can you read the Metro through glass
The colour of weak coffee? Of thin gravy?
Sepia eyes screwed tight,
Up all night with baby, maybe?
Grab squared paper and a compass to
Sketch a trigonometric face,
All angles, sharp points and
Unremarkable features. What does it prove
When a nose rises like Mount Olympus
Above cheeks so smooth?
A boyish tuft of hair,
Cotton wool clogged with glue,
Stoically styled to stifle the fear
That one day Blue Peter might appear,
Construct a face of corrugated cardboard,
Papier-mâché and little sponge bits for a beard,
Then size him up and single him out with
A derisive aside, just as he feared:
‘Look, there goes one that we made earlier.’

18th May Commuter

His greasy green coat glistens like the skin of a wet reptile,
A slippy, gangrenous bath tile,
Tangy as a venus flytrap’s saliva
Sharp as limes, stuck in the mud
Smoking sativa, eyes rosy with bud,
Slumped on the back shelf,
Puffy tunnels lined with filo gargoyles
And melting crenelations. Floating here and there
Lost en route from station to station,
Shifty as twilight, a golden hour caught
In a cat’s eyes at night –
Use your walnuts to polish them bright.
Skipping down, I’ll go out on a limb
And call that skinny moustache a scuff mark on his chinny chin chin,
Flickering like train tracks,
Skittering ripped bin bags in the winny wind wind.
As above, sew below, the ripped
Knee holes blink open and find that they’re blind
Thanks to each awkward shuffle of a restless behind.

May 16th Commuter

I’m staring at a Black watch,
A heavyset onyx rain drop,
Squeezing the veins of a forearm
Riddled with blue worms. Pulsing,
convulsing as the blood pumps under
A knuckle bump.
Slim fit t-shirt the dark grey of a
Burnt out coal lump. Embers remember a
Shadow waking up then slipping off
So Stick it on with soap if it gloats, or
Stick to sewing with thread if in bed and it’s dead.

A tummy rumble,
Squawking brakes
Compete against the train’s grumble.

Ochre shoes sit among the gum and the grime,
A pair of glass slippers preserved in hotdog brine
From which dangles the hypodermic needle
Of a shoelace’s head, the plastic tip is
Feeble and cracked on its deathbed.
Spilling fibers frothy as the mouth of the Tiber
White as the grin smeared across Tony the Tiger.
And he could be much slier
When disguising the dire
Sweat stains that make a
Black shirt turn blacker
Than a burnt egg frittata,
Or the Old El Paso beans in Wahaca,
So Roll on your deo
Cos you’re pungent and
Sweetly sweat lacquered.