Stowing Memories
There’s a tan coloured plastic cup
sat out of place in the lonely tennis ball graveyard of Hazard Alley, wandered far from Lux Park’s vending machine, catching a ride on the wind, it’s talking to itself, reminiscing of friends gone by, baked apple crumbles, the fresh bread rolls unbuttered, the greasy sausage rolls that are now all vegans, and the countless bags of chips who’ve got their GCSE’s and A Levels and are now studying how to be full time parents or how to salute whilst making a bed, he remembers stink bombs unable to contain themselves in the main corridor in the French rooms in the toilets in the English department in... well... you get the idea, he’s laughing to himself picturing sliding down the banister of the stairs in the old hall of the stairs in the technology building of the stairs in the French rooms of... well... you get the idea, he’s trying to remember how to speak French, “Il y a un jambon et un poisson avec moi a la discotheque.” He thinks he sounds clever, he wonders what happened to the thick wooden tables that used to balance Bunsen burners on their heads in the old science block, bulky wooden tables cut from the Ark or the Argonaut or maybe just a really fat tree, there’s a smell he cannot place, either burning wood sanded on the spinning disk or maybe just the smell of burnt toast coming from the sixth form common room, from his spot by the fire station, he can hear the school buses stamping up and down the road, he wants to know if they have a dinner pass or perhaps they don’t need one because they’re buses, do they still expel dust from the seats when a body slams down on them? Does the dust dance like it’s in the Inter-Tutor Group Dance Competition or does it have more of a pre-University fed ambition? If the dust still dances then (he hopes) surely the stink of dried mud in the changing rooms still plays rugby, or maybe it still clings to the backs of legs or ears, hoping to sneak its way into a maths lesson and steal itself some learning, he imagines the lockers to be the cleverest of all the sentinels of the school, all those decades of books stuffed inside, hour upon hour studying geographical maps, the civil rights movement, and Mr Shakespeare, though on that logic the lockers should have high cholesterol from all those decades of crisps stuffed inside, the tan coloured plastic cup sighs deeply in the lonely tennis ball graveyard of Hazard Alley, it lifts from the ground and wanders far, catching a ride on the memories.
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AuthorThom Boulton is a contemporary free verse poet who lives and performs in the South West, UK. He is Plymouth's current Poet Laureate. Archives
October 2018
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