| Baker street muse
|
| Windy bus-stop. |
| click. |
| shop-window. |
| heel.
|
| Shady gentleman. |
| fly-button. |
| feel.
|
| In the underpass, the blind man stands.
|
| With cold flute hands.
|
| Symphony match-seller, breath out of time.
|
| You can call me on another line.
|
| Indian restaurants that curry my brain.
|
| Newspaper warriors changing the names they
|
| Advertise from the station stand.
|
| With cold print hands.
|
| Symphony word-player, Ill be your headline.
|
| If you catch me another time.
|
| Didnt make her --- with my baker street ruse.
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| Couldnt shake her --- with my baker street bruise.
|
| Like to take her --- but Im just a baker street muse.
|
| Ale-spew, puddle-brew --- boys, throw it up clean.
|
| Coke and bacardi colours them green.
|
| From the typing pool goes the mini-skirted princess
|
| With great finesse.
|
| Fertile earth-mother, your burial mound is fifty feet
|
| Down in the baker street underground. |
| (what the hell!)
|
| Walking down the gutter thinking,
|
| ``how the hell am I today?
|
| Well, I didnt really ask you but thanks all the same.
|
| Pig-me and the whore
|
| ``big bottled fraulein, put your weight on me, said the
|
| Pig-me to the whore,
|
| Desperate for more in his assault upon the mountain.
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| Little man, his youth a fountain.
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| Overdrafted and still counting.
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| Vernacular, verbose; |
| an attempt at getting close to Where he came from.
|
| In the doorway of the stars, between blandford street
|
| And mars;
|
| Proposition, deal. |
| flying button feel. |
| testicle testing.
|
| Wallet ever-bulging. |
| dressed to the left, divulging
|
| The wrinkles of his years.
|
| Wedding-bell induced fears.
|
| Shedding bell-end tears in the pocket of her resistance.
|
| International assistance flowing generous and full
|
| To his never-ready tool.
|
| Pulls his eyes over her wool.
|
| And he shudders as he comes.
|
| And my rudder slowly turns me into the marylebone
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| Road.
|
| Crash-barrier waltzer
|
| And here slip I --- dragging one foot in the gutter ---
|
| In the midnight echo of the shop that sells cheap
|
| Radios.
|
| And there sits she --- no bed, no bread, no butter ---
|
| On a double yellow line --- where she can park anytime.
|
| Old lady grey; |
| crash-barrier waltzer ---
|
| Some only sons mother. |
| baker street casualty.
|
| Oh, mr. |
| policeman --- blue shirt ballet master.
|
| Feet in sticking plaster ---
|
| Move the old lady on.
|
| Strange pas-de-deux ---
|
| His romeo to her juliet.
|
| Her sleeping draught, his poisoned regret.
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| No drunken bums allowed to sleep here in the
|
| Crowded emptiness.
|
| Oh officer, let me send her to a cheap hotel ---
|
| Ill pay the bill and make her well — like hell you
|
| Bloody will!
|
| No do-good over kill. |
| we must teach them
|
| To be still more independent.
|
| Mother england reverie
|
| I have no time for time magazine or rolling stone.
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| I have no wish for wishing wells or wishing bones.
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| I have no house in the country I have no motor car.
|
| And if you think Im joking, then Im just a one-line
|
| Joker in a public bar.
|
| And it seems theres no-body left for tennis; |
| and im A one-band-man.
|
| And I want no top twenty funeral or a hundred grand.
|
| There was a little boy stood on a burning log,
|
| Rubbing his hands with glee. |
| he said, ``oh mother england,
|
| Did you light my smile; |
| or did you light
|
| This fire under me?
|
| One day Ill be a minstrel in the gallery.
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| And paint you a picture of the queen.
|
| And if sometimes I sing to a cynical degree ---
|
| Its just the nonsense that it seems.
|
| So I drift down through the baker street valley,
|
| In my steep-sided un-reality.
|
| And when all is said and all is done --- I couldnt wish
|
| For a better one.
|
| Its a real-life ripe dead certainty ---
|
| That Im just a baker street muse.
|
| Talking to the gutter-stinking, winking in the same
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| Old way.
|
| I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way.
|
| Indian restaurants that curry my brain ---
|
| Newspaper warriors changing the names they
|
| Advertise from the station stand.
|
| Circumcised with cold print hands.
|
| Windy bus-stop. |
| click. |
| shop-window. |
| heel.
|
| Shady gentleman. |
| fly-button. |
| feel.
|
| In the underpass, the blind man stands.
|
| With cold flute hands.
|
| Symphony match-seller, breath out of time ---
|
| You can call me on another line.
|
| Didnt make her --- with my baker street ruse.
|
| Couldnt shake her --- with my baker street bruise.
|
| Like to take her --- but Im just a baker street muse.
|
| (I cant get out!) |