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Song of the Pavement




A grudging penny given to a beggar 

Burns through his hand and scorches through the earth.


The wheat fields of the High Street

Sway and wave across the harvest moon

And salmon leap in crimson arcs and silver.


In every corner of every café

Sits a wonder of ancient gold

And gold enamellings

From the outside looking in

A silent clockwork bird 

Leans through the glass and

Turns its head at everything.


And in the cold wind, a life

Of quiet, inner joy expands

Like an exploding star.


Within each broiling galaxy

Another is born and sent

Chagall paints through time’s space

Burning in a crucible

Entropy’s igneous imaginings.


A little life holds all the world, 

A tiny girl holds hands, gibbers and dances

Ecstatically with joy.


Rain pours through

A huge acacia tree

A maculate giraffe

Saunters by the shops.

Dürer’s armoured rhino lumbers past

Intent on his intent.


Here, where everything is dull and dying

Is where everything is everlastingly alive.

The extraordinary seeps through the ordinary 

Bringing us to life.


We walk the pavement every day

We tread upon it as we walk our way

And, with every step, we hear it say

“You weary me.”


Dull grey is made of a million squares of 

Vibrant light.

Get close and see this on your knees.

Within each lifeless yard

An endless beauty.

And on these miserable, drab

Becalmed avenues are

Lived out lives of deadness and of joy.


Every High Street sounds like a symphony – 

Melodious, a shifting poem of lyric harmonies

Rhymes and rhythms complex and miraculous

An Ellington jazz band dancing on the 

Hard and concrete street


Here, amid quotidian grey

Murmured voices mutter banalities.


Here, the dullest suburb life beholds,

Watches the oldest stories in the world unfold

Each cemented yard reveals

A human landscape all unseen, 

A muted Odyssey yet untold.

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