Old uniform

Pack it all away:
the death black hoodie,
the boots with duct tape for toes,
the grey beanie tighter than thoughts,
the fingers gloves with no palms,
the pocketless trousers,
the T-shirt with a target on the chest,
the skin begging to feel differently.
Pack it all away, but keep it nearby.
You never know when you’ll need it.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

Live animals in transit

The night is a jaguar’s tail,
too dark to see if the driver has human eyes.
The van is too small for a horse,
too big for a grasshopper or one duck.
We are too far away
to hear any noise from inside.
Can a mouse understand a SatNav?
Cats probably prefer an A-Z map
to show off their skills to stupid hamsters.
The paintwork of the body is tortoise green,
like motorway trees in the day time.
There’s a puppy in the back of our car,
he has two legs, two arms and is daft
enough to think two apes know what’s going on.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

Fictional breath

I like to pretend I’m not real:
change my accent, comb my hair,
wear trainer socks, tell stories
about the way I’ve been up to no good.
There will be days
people want to listen to the sound
of things falling into place,
the sound of your world relaxing,
the sound of what could always be.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

The Man City academy boys are walking down the road

They are chugging orange Lucozade Sports,
spitting on the path, taking selfies of their hair.
They are peacocks. They are tap dancers.
They are magicians at a party we are not invited to.
I’ve never seen so many knees in January.
Half of their ears have wireless headphones plugged in.
Their smiles are goalie glove wide.
Their sky blue tops hold them in hope
like a skydiver clutching their parachute straps.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

I could watch you watching trains until I no longer have eyes

What did I do before you were born?
Worry about someone else’s death, I guess.
When your lip exploded in the Waitrose car park
yesterday I felt Grandma’s hands
as my left cheek slid off like ham
in a supermarket’s deli meat slicer.
The man behind us in the pub says,
Trains don’t go ‘choo choo’ anymore,
they’re all electric these days
.
You take advantage of not understanding
full sentences and point through the window
at the track with passion stronger than time.
Choo choo. My bones relax like a suit
hung in a wardrobe after a wake.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

Holding it together

He’s sitting in the window
stitching his minutes together
at the sewing machine.
The lights from the pet shop
are blinking in his direction
while the whiff of gherkins
pours in from the burger bar.
The world stomps past him
on busy feet. A fresh set of toes,
only two months into their job,
slow his eyes to a stop.
He waves a well worn hand
with the patience of thread
finding a needle. He is met
with the point of a miniature finger
to push his cheeks into a smile.

© Carl Burkitt 2022

Bin men will wave

if you wave first
they might honk their horn
to keep a passion of yours
alive. Like a tree, you stand
still by the road captured in a moment
you’ve only seen in books
or on that YouTube compilation
we somehow found one day
when your teeth needed to get out
of your skull. The traffic lights
go green and the truck leaves
followed by a bus
you didn’t realised was there,
then your eyes; two engines
desperate to roar.

© Carl Burkitt 2022