- I am concered that this reads a little to close to prose, which is not my intention.
i have tried to mix up the stanza's in regards to thier look and thier flow. Do the line breaks work? is the ending slightly to contrived???Passing stalls of scattered loot
I force
a slow pace.
Hand in hand
we pass Sunday-market spoils,
Yellowed comics,dog eared
& crispy dry.
Coloring pencils packaged
like flattened rainbows,
I was a moth to light.
Behind a clutter of bric-a-brac stalls
We worm our way to where
a skin rumpled gent
in perfect ironed attire
beckons passers by
with a stump arm and broad smile.
Noticing my questioning brow,
on how his shoulder
led to nothing but a blunt end,
he recites
how he lost it to a mortar,
how the blood sprayed the air
like a carnival firework
whilst soft whiskered boys
buried their head into the sands
and wailed for the words
of their mothers.
Father bought me a keyring bullet
and refused to accept the change.
Back in the stuttering worm of shoppers
I ask father
why to mention Grandad was forbidden-
he answered with a gaze out to sea.
Thirty years on
Now death has can-opened the tight lidded silence
I discover the unease
of our history
in a box-
From his mother
to her best friend Betty
a never-sent-letter
on how Granddad
had met a French whore on duty
and would not be coming home again.