Couplet
Dedicated
to Victor Arendorff, Högalid
In Arendorff’s day
skies were vast, never grey,
with the stars almost
touching your hat.
People laughed til they
dropped;
if at night you got copped
there was nothing so special
in that.
And high spirits were there
for the telling,
though a barrel made do for
a dwelling.
And you starved and you
froze
but you won by a nose.
There was nothing so special
in that.
But now life is plain hard
in both street or backyard
in a pub or café or small
flat.
You sit quiet as can be,
like a bust or a tree:
can you see something
special in that?
No, in Arendorff’s day you
breathed freely,
mixed with barons and counts
ten times yearly.
If you spoke like a lout
well, you soon got thrown
out:
There was nothing so special
in that.
Times were quite debonair,
but with sleek head of hair
social levelling came in to
bat.
We became, hardly odd,
just like peas in a pod.
Can you see something
special in that?
People pay all their taxes,
are civil,
but all recklessness shun
like the devil.
Now life’s zest has been
quashed
like a hat that’s been
squashed.
I see nothing so special in
that.
Yes, you live without pause
off the body that’s yours
and then whoosh,
one-two-three, that was that.
And in some makeshift dray
you’re then carted away.
There is nothing so special
in that.
Should a bird feel the urge
to start trilling
at your passing, t’would be
almost thrilling.
Though the vicar’s no bird,
mumbles hardly a word,
there
is nothing so special in that.
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