Poetry at the Wine Vaults in Bath
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imported blog post
Monday February 11, 2013 15:03 by Greener Bristol

I'm getting ready to go read my poems at St James' Wine Vaults in Bath tonight. Opens 7.30pm. So I've been reading my poems first time for a couple of years, which is a bit of a surprise.
This is the main one tonight.
I saw a Somali migrant woman on the streets of Easton Bristol one cold wet dark night and it came in a rush:
STORM SHELTER
They say that rain’s like tears. What do they know?
I’ve seen real rain run down the faces of my friends
while they laughed and cried with playful happiness
to greet the huge warm drops splashed down from - not clouds
if these grey slops are clouds - from bulging dizzy uproarious pregnant white blue-black grey light-shot sky mountains. How do they know
there are no gods in there? What does a man of any colour know of gods?
Those trembling raindrops turned tawny dust a bloody brown
and in a lightning flash (it seemed to us ) the magic world turned green.
That’s rain. This isn’t rain. It’s more like a cold sweat
like the one drawn out when you wake from nightmare
and fear to sleep again in case you go back in.
But this is worse, the nightmare carries on under the sun. You’re caught both ways.
Instead of thunder we got bombs
instead of flames from dry thorn sticks crackling to warm a calabash of stew
we got the spitting fire of small-arms battle noise
and all that sunlit brown skin life joy stopped.
This cold thin silver greyness is not tears. Tears are hot.
Faces that shone with rain went still as stones, eyes now forever dry,
open in blank surprise, and dead teeth shining
cloud white in faces pillowed in brown skin mother mud.
The sun forever left my land only the burning stayed.
Dreamlike we travelled, ran, hid and waited until
somehow that moment when the big bird roared and pushed
and I was born again borne off the rumbling roughness of the ground
smooth into sunlit white-cloud world where gods live for a day
to wake up here
stood on a tarry Bristol road polished with streetlights
crashing with cars cold water running down my face
caught here alone, alive but in a cold dark hell.
Of course, it doesn’t always rain. Sometimes I see a spark of good in someone’s eyes.
© Richard Lawson
I'm going to read the Jobbing Squaddie (here, and scroll down) and a few others too, because they've given me 20 minutes. And this is a reinvitation - I read the whole of Ogrin and the Boy to them a few years ago and they've invited me back! Very excited.
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