Read My Poetry - The Dance Page 4


  Just Get The Car

  I’ve got a job

  Serving in a bar

  If that’s my lot

  Just get the car

  I’ve got a woman

  Sits home all day

  Just waiting there

  To pick up my pay

  I’ve had a dream

  Could’ve been a star

  If that’s all over

  Just get the car

  I’ve got a child

  A little boy

  Who breaks my heart

  But brings me joy

  I’ve got a home

  Got to pay the rent

  But before I do

  It’s always spent

  I’ve had a life

  Away from this bar

  If it’s at an end

  Just get the car

  I had a wish

  Silly little dream

  But my Mama said

  Boy what do you mean

  I’ve had a drink

  Led to affairs

  But if there’s food

  My woman don’t care

  I’ve had a life

  Dreamed of the stars

  If that’s all over

  Just get the car

  The Girl With The Pale Blue Eyes

  It was a cold November morning,

  And the gods fought in the skies,

  That was when I first saw her,

  The girl with the pale blue eyes.

  Her dress it was made out of tartan,

  And her hair was as black as the night,

  She saw me and then she smiled,

  And the grey skies gave way to sunlight.

  I remember we walked as we spoke,

  Kissed and my life would never be the same,

  As we danced through the night together,

  That first dance again and again.

  In the morning I woke to discover,

  Whilst I slept she’d gone from my side,

  Nothing left but an imprint in the pillow,

  Of the girl with the pale blue eyes.

  I raced to the place we first met,

  Hope against hope she’d be there,

  I searched the streets of this city,

  But not a sign of her could I find anywhere.

  As the years passed I never forgot,

  Whilst my friends laughed as I searched,

  For the girl with the pale blue eyes,

  Who I loved as if she was the first.

  And as I take you home this evening,

  My darling I won’t tell you no lies,

  Know I’ll be gone in the morning,

  Just like the girl with the pale blue eyes.

  Nana (I)

  What wonders have you seen through those eyes?

  The decades you’ve watched pass you by,

  Growing up you never said what it was like,

  It’s funny we never talked about your life.

  A million memories I see written on your face,

  The laughter lines I begin to trace,

  Was George the first don’t want to know if the last,

  It’s funny we never talked about your past.

  In every recollection I know I’ll find you there,

  Someone to love me, someone to care,

  You’d tell me no matter what it’ll be alright,

  It’s funny we never talked about your life.

  You introduced me to lemon tea and ball room dancing,

  Saying the wrong thing and not apologising,

  Saturday night dinner, meringue after the football match,

  But still no talking about your past!

  And now the visits I can make become rarer,

  Sometimes I’m scared you’ll think me a stranger,

  The understanding fades as I look in your eyes,

  The past gone and with it memories of your life.

  Is this why I bottle everything up inside?

  I always thought it was just my foolish pride,

  But what if we find that the simple truth,

  Is Nana I’m just a lot like you?

  The Weeping Willow

  Early in the morning

  The weeping willow cries

  For a man that it loved

  His children and his wife

  Way back in sixty eight

  They got took by a fire

  The weeping willow wails

  For all those who have died

  My dad he knew the girl

  They were stepping out

  But her daddy didn’t want

  Their romance putting about

  He said my dad was no good

  Wouldn’t amount to anything

  Told the town he’d forced upon

  The girl who wore his ring

  Sitting on her front porch

  My Gran listened to the lies

  Told about her little boy

  As the weeping willow cried

  Out the back hidden from view

  She could hear them sing

  Two lovers in harmony

  As he gave to her his ring

  Then one night it happened

  They say Pop was in a rage

  Found my daddy hanging out

  And my daddy was afraid

  Those four walls reverberated

  You heard them back in town

  My daddy never spoke again

  About what was to be found

  On an early Sunday morning

  A blaze lit up the sky

  They found my daddy cursing

  The good lord asking why

  The girl that he loved

  Perished in the fire

  And in the misty morning

  The weeping willow cried

  The Things That I Love About You

  When it all goes wrong it’s always my fault,

  The blame is never with you,

  If I’d have listened to you it would have been alright,

  If only I’d listened to you,

  When we argue I know I’m in the wrong,

  Because that’s what you always tell me,

  And if I didn’t give in we’d still be fighting,

  These are things I love about you.

  When you sulk because for once I stood up,

  Like a man and said no to you,

  And then give in because you never will,

  I was wrong how could I of ever doubted you,

  I should have learned to read your mind,

  You shouldn’t have to keep telling me,

  What you wanted of course was not what you said,

  These are things I love about you.

  When you cook I’m left to clean up,

  Because that’s not something that you do,

  Like the ironing or using the Hoover,

  That’s what I’m here for, for you,

  When you talk on the telephone,

  It’s always whilst I’m watching TV,

  You talk so loud I can’t help but hear what you say,

  These are things that I love about you.

  When you want a drink you’ll hold out your glass,

  And say will you get it for me,

  And I’ll go because I love you,

  And I know someday you’ll go for me,

  Because you love me too, I know it

  No matter these things that you do,

  I love you, I love you, you know that I love you,

  But tell me why do you love me.

  Megalomania

  If I put my pen down on this page,

  Where will it go?

  Who knows?

  There’s so many ideas inside of me,

  But are they right?

  Is black not white!

  I’ve often thought and thought, thought

  And thought again,

  Just who is to blame?

  I’ve solved the problems of society,

  I fed the world,

  And got the girl.

  Povert
y could be ended wars averted,

  All you have to do,

  Listen to you know who.

  Recognise, understand the answers,

  That have to be,

  Given by me!

  This is where this particular journey ends,

  Nowhere else to go,

  Megalomaniac in tow!

  My Poetry’s No Good

  My poetry’s no good,

  Because my English teacher said so,

  It doesn’t rhyme or fit the rules,

  She said.

  So I read a poem,

  But I didn’t like it but that’s just me,

  Why am I reading? I’m uneducated,

  I’ve not got an English degree,

  But she has.

  My opinion is so overrated,

  I’m just one of those who reads,

  Who because of a lack of education,

  Should be told what to think.

  Now critics I’m sorry,

  If I’ve put you in a catch 22,

  If this is good because you like it,

  Then what I’m saying’s not true,

  So listen to my English teacher,

  She said my poetry’s no good.

  About The Author

  Tomas Cody grew up in Stoke-on-Trent and spent his formative years trying to escape school life in the pubs and clubs of the city. Surprisingly he managed to get enough of an education to land at Leicester University where he continued try to escape education and mostly he succeeded.

  Now living in New Zealand Tomas has continued to try to dodge bettering himself and instead works a nine to five to pay the bills.

 
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