what can I say?
I needed the brass
we can argue the ethics
it won’t put meat on the table
I’d steal for my own
I’d probably kill
too raw for you?
so what would you do
there in my shoes?
.
you got ghosts in your blood you best get you some stony I got the fear on roll me one too I’m bound to get lucky I’m prepared to die trying you can fetch me solace from another man’s gutter because I’m headed home where there will be a welcome or a maybe just a lynching they might have forgotten I hope they’ve forgiven what’s done is done and I paid my dues
I don’t believe in resurrections or in tearful reconciliations the past is gone forever ghosts take shape in its shade and my head is haunted with that fearful geometry and the friends undone by time and tide you take your best shot and maybe another you might win some but you’ll likely lose more no-one passes this way unless they pay the toll
I lost my spit and shine
And the all weather finish
That had served me so well
Against the inclement
I had been less than diligent
With my applications
You might call me lazy
But I was tired of the front
And dropped my guard
The signature of a chump
I took the blows due me
And maybe more besides
But there’s always a final straw
An injury that cannot be borne
Often it’s a concealed blade
Nestled in the hand of a friend
I’d be a hypocrite to complain
My dabs were all over that instrument
The blood on my hands was not my own
My complicity was beyond all reasonable doubt
.
His name was Calum Fraser and he was seventeen, though none of us knew this at the time. The folk on the ward just referred to him as the boy who cries. Calum cried a lot – no, Calum wept a lot. You might say he was inconsolable, but I don’t remember anyone actually trying to console him. It was heart rending and it was embarrassing. So we did our best to ignore him. I thought about going to him once or twice. To put my arm around him and ask him what was wrong, but I never did. I always figured he had lost someone. You only grieve like that when you have lost someone.
Poor Calum. He wept both night and day. I know because he slept in my dorm and kept me awake with his sobbing. One night I lost the rag and told him that if he did not shut up I’d give him something to cry about. I felt instant shame. Those words shame me still. He stopped crying a few days later when he fashioned a noose from a bed sheet and hung himself in a toilet cubicle.
It must have taken a determined effort to hang himself on his knees like that. He was still kneeling in the doorway of the cubicle when I found him; the improvised noose held him upright in cruel mockery of prayer. His had been a gruesome death, a violent death, the bulging eyes and bloated tongue attested to that. I hoped to God that he’d found some peace and that death had finally dried his tears.
.
Most people are lost
In power games
Of their own devising
Ensnared in the he said/she said
They endorse misery and conflict
For all of their lives
But it’s hard to hold your head high
When you’re swimming in shit
And that’s the greatest threat
To your personal freedom
Not that some unseen hand
Takes away your power through force
But that you give it away freely
As a matter of course
.
dope him
rope him
tie him down
and smoke him
electrode his brainpan
with 20,000 megajolts
zap some sense into him
teach him to be well again
then take him downstairs
and chemically castrate him
with the great abomination
pump him with the ga ga juice
until he’s lost the will
kosh him ‘til his lights go out
.