The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Poor Door
Luke Kennard
Symbolist prose poem with a 12 line doggerel-esque ditty as back entrance, the ‘poor door’, or porte pauvre, should include a change-over word, or porte baisers, which finishes the prose poem and begins the first quatrain of the verse. The form reflects a trend in 21st century architecture whereby luxury apartment blocks are fitted with a secret service entrance for ordinary tenants.
We built a stack of gambling chips in your neighbourhood. It
crushed a scale model of itself. We waxed and bleached the
parkland to worry out the dealers. We covered it with grey and
black marble tiles: QR codes that took you straight to a snuff
movie. Our monogrammed postboxes are extra wide to allow for
the quality of stationery. It’s not that we look down on you – our
gentility’s unimpeachable – it’s that you’re out of place here: a
peach with genitals. It’s not about where you came from it’s how
you’re getting in. You don’t seem to grasp: nice is a weapon. You
don’t seem to grasp: you bought the mirrors that warped you.
We just don’t like what you like, that’s why we’re trying to avoid
you. And if policies and Holy Sees conspire against our sanctum,
you’ll argue that we think you’re less: it’s you who bears the
snobbery. Your public art: a giant marble nose. All we asked is
not living next door to the resentful. A neighbour who doesn’t
hold the door. Oh god: a wound, a hole, an aperture we don’t
know where it came from special brew to premier cru
we all drink something fizzy
excuse me, sorry, i-it’s the meek –
we’re sure you’re very busy.
WILL STONE relishes the chance to hear the Isle of Wight indie sensation in an intimate setting
by Widad Nabi
The Labour Party proposal to scrap benefits for those unable to work will be debated in Parliament next Tuesday, and threatens the most vulnerable in our society. ALAN MORRISON presents some responses in poetry
By Alexis Lykiard


