Harbour cottage, Isle of Barra |
When I was a child, the only breakfast cereal in our house
was cornflakes. At my Nanna’s it was cornflakes or All Bran. Once, I asked for
All Bran. It was horrid, but I ate it because I’d asked for it, and that is
what happened in those days. If my grandchildren choose something then don’t
like it, I’ll find them something else – I’m a softy. At some point, Kellogg’s
Rice Krispies made it to our kitchen and true to the advert on TV, as soon as
the milk was added ‘Snap, Crackle and Pop’ happened. It’s funny when you’re
only eight and still makes me smile.
My first introduction to John Cooper Clarke was listening to
his album, ‘Snap, Crackle and Bop’. It wasn’t the music, it was the words, the
clever imagery of Beasley Street and Evidently Chickentown made me laugh. His
appearance fascinated me then, about 1980, and unchanged, it still does. I’m
reading ‘I Wanna Be Yours’ and trying to make it last because I’ll miss it when
it ends.
Here is my poem for JCC,
Those of the time embraced every word,
Listening in wonder to John Cooper Clarke,
The Bard of Salford who had to be heard.
Rapid from the mouth and skinny and dark.
‘Evidently Chickentown’, effing good,
He’s magic with words, bright as any spark.
His wholesome description meant that we could
Smell the inhabitants of ‘Beasley Street’;
Rich mixture of urban decay and blood.
Life, humour and truth, a picture complete
And painted with colourful language that
Reaches all listeners not just the elite.
So thanks, JCC, I know where I’m at
Laughing out loud at the poem called ‘Twat’.
Pamela Winning 2012
Thanks for reading. Stay safe and have the best Christmas you can. Pam x
5 comments:
I'm hoping Santa has a copy of I Wanna be Yours for me. I've been good this year ;-)
I hope you get one! Mine is a birthday gift from my son 🙂
Ah thanks for the memories - of Rice Bubbles, as we called them in Australia, and of Barra. I stayed in a cottage very like the one in the picture, for a few days, not long before my second son was born. Elder son was a toddler, and I have two strong memories of that trip. 1) when the tide came in, covered the small front garden and the front doorstep. 2) The toddler tripped and banged his head on a low shelf in the kitchen, producing a classic black eye. Love the poem, and love the structure, must have a go at one of those some time. Thanks for the inspiration! Merry Festive Season. Stay safe.
Thank you, Flloyd 🙂 Merry Christmas and here's hoping for better times ahead xx
Yes you can't beat a crackling fire when the wind is roaring outside. I liked your Terza Rima poem for JCC.
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