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    Fred the Pirate and other poems


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    FRED THE PIRATE AND OTHER POEMS

      Paul Chapman

      Copyright 2013 Paul Chapman

      This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold

      or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person,

      please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did

      not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to

      of this author.

      CONTENTS

      My uncle Fred the pirate

      A day with OCD

      Best friends

      Bonsai tree

      The seagull

      Venting my spleen

      The café girl of Huddersfield

      Dancing the Pasodoble

      Does superman pick his nose

      Elfin child

      Fluffy kittens

      The cage

      The nudist beach

      Paquita

      The cowboy hat

      Small change

      The beggars mass

      In for a treat

      Flawed

      Day one

      Ethereal shite

      Red geraniums

      The poets and writer group

      The fiesta of San Marco

      MY UNCLE FRED THE PIRATE

      My uncle Fred as I’d been told

      Had once been a pirate bold

      He’d lost his leg as pirates do

      And when he had to buy a shoe

      He always had to pay for two

      So on the internet he’d try

      And then going by the book

      Asked for a wife with just one foot

      At last he met a maiden fair

      With whom his life he could share

      Some days they’d walk down the street

      With hobnail boots on their feet

      Sometimes to a dance they’d go

      In brightly sequined stiletto

      And to the rhythm and the beat

      They’d dance the high fandango

      A DAY WITH O.C.D

      He wakes at seven twenty five

      Showers then washes his hands

      Three times

      Dresses

      He has three sets of clothes all the same

      He sits at the table watching the seconds tick by

      5 4 3 2 1

      Exactly eight o’clock

      Leaves the house after locking it three times

      425 steps to the paper shop

      He counts them

      Buys the paper

      The man in the paper shops birthday is

      12/06/62

      898 steps to café

      He as been to the café 1694 times

      Two waitresses

      10/02/91 and 17/07/96

      Coffee then breakfast then another coffee

      Same seat same table by the window

      Every day at eight seventeen

      Today was bad

      Some people are sat at his table

      He stands and looks

      It’s my bloody table

      Waitress 17/07/96 speaks to him

      “I’ll ask them to move” she says

      “No no I’ll go” he says

      Don’t they understand

      It’s my table

      It’s eight seventeen

      Breakfast at eight seventeen

      Then 984 steps to the Day Center

      There he looks at numbers at the patterns

      It’s all wrong

      He stands in the street counting

      “It’s my table” he says to himself

      He stands alone in the street

      He is shaking and lost.

      BEST FRIENDS.

      At dawn a mist covered the shore

      There were no people

      The man walked along the sand

      In the company of his friend

      They did not talk

      Knowing each other so well

      There was no need

      Soon they reached the place

      A quite bay surrounded by rocks

      A boat at anchor in the bay

      The man sat on a rock and spoke

      And to his friend he said goodbye

      He stayed awhile until the tide had changed

      As one small tear fell from his eye

      Then alone he walked away

      And in his hands the empty urn

      BONSAI TREE

      He walked hand in hand with his father

      High into the mountains into the clouds

      To search for his tree

      He found the small olive seedling among the rocks

      He returned to his house

      The tiny tree cradled in his hands

      Now for 40 years he has tended the tree

      Each morning before the sun scorches the earth

      Moving the tree into the shade

      He waters the tree twice

      Wires each branch and twig

      Each grey leaf perfect

      The old bark cracked and rugged

      In May small green flowers will burst

      And glow among the grey green leaves

      For many years his father as gone

      Now he grows the tree

      For his grandson

      Who is yet to be born

      THE SEAGULL

      If I was a seagull

      I’d fly out to the sea

      I’d watch out for the fishy bits

      And have them for my tea

      When my belly it is full

      I’d head back to the shore

      Where high above your heads I’d soar

      To aim a little gift for you

      A little

      Fishy

      Poo

      VENTING MY SPLEEN

      I’m not sure how long it’s been

      But it seems I’ve vented my spleen

      I’m not sure how or why I did it

      But someone said I done it

      Now my spleen has been vented

      I’m worried

      Should I see a medic

      Or even a surgeon

      To unvent it?

      So yesterday I saw a doctor

      Told him my spleen had been vented

      He looked at me

      Patted me on the head and called me an idiot

      Now I’m even more worried

      I have a vented spleen

      And a diagnosis from the doctor

      Of being a blithering idiot

      THE CAFÉ GIRL OF HUDDERSFIELD

      With greasy hair and spotted skin

      She pours cracked jugs of tea

      Do you want sugar in it

      As she doles out two spoons

      Then turning to fry egg and chips

      But

      She dreams of a sun kissed isle

      Where coconut palms sway

      In a warm salt laden breeze

      She pours out the planters punch

      Adorned with tiny bright umbrellas

      Then goes to swim naked

      In azure coral spangled seas

      Where phospherant sea horses play

      Among the star lit waves

      Next day she buys tiny coloured umbrellas

      And adorns each mug of tea

      To brighten up her day

      And dreams

      DANCING THE PASODOBLE

      The old folk sit around the wall

      Their chairs highbacked plastic covered

      The television shows a Columbian soap

      But no one watches

      Someone totters off to the bathroom

      Calling for a nurse as he goes

      But today it is different someone plays music

      With hands clapping and feet tapping


      Then to the shouts of olay

      The old folk rise to dance

      Their arthritis forgotten their dim eyes shine

      As in their minds they return to the time

      When they were young and virile

      When the senors were matadors

      And the senoritas had roses in their mouths

      With grace and passion they danced

      The pasodoble

      Then at last the music stops they return to their chairs

      And someone totters off to the bathroom

      Calling for a nurse

      DOES SUPERMAN PICK HIS NOSE

      Does superman ever pick his nose?

      He might do I suppose

      Although I’ve never seen him do it

      I think he might alone in secret

      Do his bogies glow in the dark?

      Do they turn into kryptonite?

      When he blows out his birthday candles

      Are things destroyed as though by vandals?

      And worse of all when he breaks wind

      Is there typhoons and hurricanes?

      People tremble and live in fear

      When he lets gas out of his rear

      The ozone layer beyond repair

      Climate change gets worse each year

      So breaking wind and picking noses

      Might not smell of scented roses

      But if these are done by your man

      Just thank God he is not superman

      ELFIN CHILD

      The daydreaming child stolen by elves

      To live in her own mystic world

      She does not see the reality of life

      For she resides in a very different place

      In a world of beauty and kindness

      Of knights on snow white horses

      Sweeping her off her feet

      The air is full of rainbows

      That sparkles in the eternal sun

      But that was when she was young

      When others said “How quaint.” And smiled

      At such a dream like child

      Now she is sixteen years

      And she has learnt

      That beautiful people are not kind

      There are no knights on snow white steeds

      The men that drive expensive cars

      And only want one thing

      The rainbows have dispersed

      Leaving indelible marks

      On her pallid skin

      FLUFFY KITTEN

      I have no birds left in the garden

      And all the mice have gone

      It’s all down to Kellogg

      That’s the name of my very fat cat

      Now she sits on the dresser

      With a wicked glint in her eye

      She eyeing up my goldfish

      That swims in a bowl on the side

      I feed her with plenty of cat food

      But that does not seem to fill her

      So I gave her the name of Kellogg

      Cause she’s a serial killer

      OK I know I didn’t quite do the fluffy kitten bit but pretty close

      THE CAGE.

      The brilliant yellow green canary

      Flutters feebly to the ground

      Then flying weakly to the low branches

      Unable to reach the higher branches

      To the safety of the foliage

      To hide amongst the leaves

      All its life it had been confined

      Its world a small cage

      Fed and watered

      It would fill the air with song

      But now by chance it has freedom

      Now to afraid now to sing

      Does it yearn for the safety of its cage?

      For truly the cage was her protection

      In its freedom it will not survive

      Do we also need the confines of society?

      The moral cage that is imposed upon us

      Although we may yearn for freedom

      Would we survive without restrictions?

      Or would we flutter weakly

      Then fall as prey to the marauding beasts of this world

      That lay in wait to devour the innocent

      THE NUDIST BEACH

      200 lumps of corpulent flesh

      400 wobbling chins

      Buckets full of sunscreen

      Splashed about at whim

      Soon the conservationists

      Into the bay do sail

      To save the marine disaster

      Of 200 stranded whales

      Each one is then towed out to sea

      It’s all OK they can not drown

      For they are so fat

      They just bob around

      PAQUITA

      .

      From far of Ecuador she came

      With visions of a better life

      No more to see her friends again

      And to leave her family home

      With her she brings the tunes and songs

      From the Andes high

      And the verdant valleys of her land

      Where she will always belong

      Even now after many years

      Her heart and mind are there

      And when she hears Mercedes sing

      The tears begin to fall

      Gracias la Vida and

      Alfonsina de la Mar

      The songs of her homeland

      Soothes her heart and soul.

      THE COWBOY HAT

      .

      A while ago I was given a gift

      It hangs from a nail on the wall

      Its round and it’s brown with a very large rim

      And it hales from Ecuador

      I’ve been told by the bearer

      That all men wear them

      In far off Ecuador

      But to me it seems flashy

      And not at all dashing

      That’s why it hangs on the nail

      That’s where it is parked

      Until after dark

      Then I wear it without fail

      I suppose I have to be thankful

      For as far as things go

      It could have been worse

      It could have been Mexico

      SMALL CHANGE

      He approaches each person

      The man from Polonia

      Holding out his hand

      Politely asking, pleading

      For small change

      His wife sits on a nearby bench

      She’s pregnant

      I look at the woman

      She looks tired and resigned

      Like a dog that has been beaten too much

      Her spirit broken

      For two hours

      In the scorching Spanish sun

      I watch people walk by their heads held high

      And I weep for man’s inhumanity to fellow men

      Their disregard for the sufferings of others

      THE BEGGARS MASS

      Each Sunday he’s there

      Each Mass each Evensong

      As the church bells call the faithful to prayer

      He sits on the steps

      His skin the colour of burnished hazelnuts

      Once he had shoes but no more

      His mongrel dog asleep in his lap

      The priest greets each person

      The beggar does not exist

      The beggar speaks to each person as they enter the church

      Very few return the greeting

      In their fine Sunday clothes

      And their one euro for the church

      They put their coin onto the plate with a show and flourish

      And bow to the battle flags that adorn the alter

      The beggar will be lucky to get a few cents

      When they die who will be sat outside heavens gate?

      Who will enter the kingdom of God

      The beggar or the self-righteous?

      Will the meek ever inherit the earth?

      IN FOR A TREAT

      The two bluebottle flies

      Watched as the dog crapped

      Befouling the street

    &nbs
    p; They descended with no reservations

      They were in for a treat

      As they alighted

      They were delighted

      In their life of

      Low expectations

      FLAWED.

      He’s flawed he knows it

      He knows he’s different

      Can’t quite put his finger on it

      Ok we all sin

      Nobody’s perfect

      He can understand that

      It’s as though he

      Self-destructs

      Like a Charlie’s Angels tape

      As soon as people get close

      Bam

      He puts up a wall

      One day friendly

      Then up it goes

      Like ice

      End of friendship

      End of love

      Move on

      Live with it

      DAY ONE

      Dawn had my last cigarette

      Took the dog out

      Two hours later had my forth cup of coffee

      Took the dog to the park to play

      Sat on a bench to get some fresh air

      By lunch time I could kill

      Decide to have a burger for lunch

      Served by a spotty faced youth

      Who tells me to have a nice day

      Bleeding idiot

      I bet he smokes

      I glare at him and he goes pale

      Mumbles sorry and goes into the back

      I see Jose and we stand and chat

      He’s happily smoking

      Antonio walks past

      Puffing away

      Bastards I hate every one

      By morning I’ll hate the whole world

      I think for the benefit of all mankind

      I should buy a packet of cigs

      ETHEREAL SHITE

      Riding high on your first book

      Hoping someone will take a look

      Then when you reach the height

      Someone calls it ethereal shite

      So why on google do we write?

      Our poems the good or bad

      Does some good come out of it

      Is this also ethereal shite?

      A poet needs his poems to write

      Otherwise a secret they become

      To never see the light

      or is this also ethereal shite?

      THE RED GERANIUMS.

      Each day I see them on their balcony

      The old man and his wife

      They relax in the evening sun

      She tend the red geraniums in their clay pots

      For well over a year I’ve seen them

      Now we acknowledge each other

      With a wave or a nod of the head

      Last week they had visitors

      A young couple and 3 children

      I heard them laughing and chattering

      For three days I did not see the old couple

      Now only the old woman sits on the balcony

      Tending the scarlet geraniums

      Perhaps very little as changed

      But to her the whole world is different

      THE POETS AND WRITERS GROUP

      At 11 o’clock they always meet

     


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