Placeholders
When I called him, he
approached with caution –
a burnt ochre offering with a rug on,
stuck on back-stick twitching like a metronome.
Keeping bad time, I must state,
no musician could make
much of his six eight
less a rolling meter, more
a shaggy dog’s tale.
I wouldn’t say he had a
cocky eye,
pushed a grizzled muzzle
between my thighs
but if he could talk, he might
sigh -
been instructed to
worry a given pronoun
like a long dead buried
bone
that calls every hole in
the ground a home -
and told not to take it
lying down
while upon his brow – that
ancient frown
which, as you might think,
determines nothing
at this time. You ask
yourself – do they do that?
Dig them out of the
mud, drop them clagged
in dirt on the ground - with
hearts singing glad
as around about
in lieu of a proper walk or
the thrill of the hunt
by sour faced or ancient
one-sticked grunts.
He’s had his fill, leashed
outside vape shops,
Waterstone’s, Boots the
Chemist, the Co-Op -
scruffy, scrawny, big, small,
box-blunt chopped
or hop-bellies so big they’ve
dropped
beneath legs that
struggle to hold them up –
and, listening impatiently
to their gossip
while something that
passes for an owner
looked at life and took
him for a placeholder.

