- Vol. 02
- Chapter 08
Strip Jack Naked
I am from any one of the numerous packs of cardsthat littered my childhood home —
ever ready answers for idle moments.
I am from Strip Jack Naked, Patience, and Snap,
from Gin Rummy, Old Maid, and Newmarket —
played around the dining room table
with family on Christmas night.
I am from brown-stained skirting boards,
from gritty Vim and the smell of Mansion Polish —
from the well proportioned rooms of a 1930s semi.
(Box like, traditional, Music While You Work flew out of its windows)
I am from lupins and michaelmas daisies,
and polished nuggets of coal — calling cards
of the earth that left comfort and warmth behind them.
I’m from roast lamb and apple pie with cream
for Sunday lunch; from my father’s buck teeth
to my mother’s expression of purse-lipped disapproval.
I’m from the Taylors and the Pringles,
(but not the socks or crisps’ Pringles).
I’m from the easily over-awed,
and the ability to fall asleep on a clothes line.
I’m from ‘Always tell the truth,’
and ‘Just wait till your father comes home’;
from Uncle Arthur’s Bible Stories,
and All Things Bright and Beautiful
to tell out my take on life.
Strip Jack Naked
On top of my wardrobe, with the cards —three ancient albums, full of family faces:
I hear their voices still, from echoes of catch phrases
recorded in fading, fountain-penned copperplate.
I am from the emoticon free albums
of my forbears, clicked and scrolled into the now.