Showing posts with label beggars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beggars. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2019

Small change

I wrote this on a recent visit to London. It's published on the website I am not a silent poet, along with much other poetry about issues of abuse of all kinds. See link below.


Small change

When you give a beggar a coin,
a pound dropped into
a ragged cardboard coffee cup,
do you feel good?

When the guy looks at you,
nods unkempt gratefulness
for your little gift,
your small change,
does it make you feel better?

When you sit with your
fat £3 a go Americano
and carrot cake on a china plate
do you wonder how he came to be
a beggar on the ground
outside the underground station?

See his tent, there,
just under the bridge.
You think, at least he has a tent,
it looks sound.
He’s better off than those
who lie on cardboard sheets
in parks and shabby doorways.

And as you eat salmon and avocado
in a restaurant by the theatre
before going to see a drama on the stage
do you wonder how
he’ll spend your pound?
Tea, coffee, cider?

You give small change,
does it make you feel better?
And there’s another,
wrapped in a wornout blanket
on the bridge, cup in hand.
You give another £1.

And as you tuck into dessert,
your favourite strawberry tart,
you think of
a woman on the bridge
holding out her empty palm
no cup
skin brown with streetlife.
You put two fifties into her hand.

And you pay £15 to see
an exhibition of photos
by Don McCullin of 50 years
of war and poverty around the world
where you see pictures of
homeless men in 1970s England
asleep, standing up, capped heads lolling,
because there was nowhere to lie down.

And here’s another today,
along the side of Southbank centre,
in a doorway.
You drop the rest of your silver coins
on his sleeping bag,
before you go into the warm concert hall.

Big problem.
 


https://iamnotasilentpoet.wordpress.com/

Friday, 29 November 2013

Harvest



Tourists take snaps in the gateway;
they don’t see him,
the man down there
on the stony ground,
cross-legged;
his big grey coat, woolly hat, crusty eyes,
a few coins on a cloth in front.
They don’t see,
their gaze doesn’t lower to him.
They all raise their eyes
to the Cathedral arch.

I walk into their shot,
to drop a coin on his cloth.
Will they notice him now,
this new beggar in the Penniless Porch?
Now that their picture is marred?
Or will they Photoshop us out,
so we don’t spoil the view?

From the bustling market
the scents of food drift --
hot spices, chocolate, herbs and
box after box of new rosy apples.
Stalls full of trinkets for the well-off
glint in cold sunshine.

A woman crouches on a low stool,
her hands held out.
The brown, cracked skin of her arms,
huge skirts gathered round her ankles.
She mutters unknowable words
as she shakes her little bag of coins,
her open mouth showing missing teeth.
But they don’t hear her sad call,
those who pass by.

And there’s a man outside the shoe shop
 – lowest price £69 a pair, on sale.
He hopes for a few spare coins;
and maybe a pair of cheap boots for winter.
He moves from foot to foot,
his quiet dance fighting the cold.
But they don’t see the rhythm of his steps,
those who pass by.

Who notices?
These three grey people,
overlooked in the bright melee
of the lush harvest-time market day.
This, in England’s smallest city,
where the rich take photos,
but they do not see,
and the camera always lies.


(Penniless Porch, Wells, revisited 12.10.13
read at The Cellar Bards, 29.11.13)



Friday, 3 August 2012

Winners and losers

 
Nothing changes

The beggar is in the Penniless Porch.
Where else would he be?
Our young man, sitting on the stone,
With his little hat in front of him,
Humbly asks for alms in 2012, in
England’s smallest fairest city.

All the long day,
His open honest face looks up
At you … and you … and you
... And me.  At
all the many hundreds who
pass through this archway.
Who looks at him?
Who looks out for him?

People look the other way,
If they see him at all.
 While the country has eyes
Only for medals - for
Gold, silver and bronze, and
‘valuable’ Olympic corporate sponsorship.

Spare a few coppers, mate?
The beneficent Bishop built
This Beggar’s Gate 600 years ago.
To give some shelter to the poor.

And now, still,we walk by
And look the other way,
As we rush to catch the latest winner,
And see the tears fall at
the medal ceremony.

Can we learn to pause now?
To wait, to stop, for just a moment?
To really see our man,
who waits in the Penniless Porch?


1/8/2012. Wells, Somerset.