Kidderminster is a town in Worcestershire. Croydon is a place in London. The British Museum is where we keep our loot, and well worth an afternoon's perusal if you are in London.
In this there are two characters, represented by being left justified and right justified, respectively. There's also a occasional narrator, who is centred, but then aren't they all?
Feel free to read it in three distinctive voices.
I had forgotten, but this was another poem from Making Contact...
By the book
She reads books,
this is where it all begins.
"Planning the crime of the century,"
was just a way to pass a rainy day
in the library
in Kidderminster
but here she is
leading Crusher, Sparks and The Countess
through the British Museum at three a.m.
with a silenced pallet truck.
He reads books
this is how it all begins.
He read "Lives of The Real Detectives,"
which seemed harmless enough
waiting for the 7:15.
The radio coughs nervously,
a glance at Constable Granger,
a nod to Dave from the Art Squad.
They've all seen the shadows moving
behind the glass.
this is how it all begins.
He read "Lives of The Real Detectives,"
which seemed harmless enough
waiting for the 7:15.
The radio coughs nervously,
a glance at Constable Granger,
a nod to Dave from the Art Squad.
They've all seen the shadows moving
behind the glass.
She's read: "Alarm Systems Explained."
He's studied:
"Weakness of the Criminal Mind"
at some length.
"Transport of Art Treasures."
"The Great Escapologists."
"Victorian Sewers Revealed."
"Traps—their design and construction,"
"The Great Escapologists."
"Anatomy of a Manhunt."
"Losing Yourself in London."
"Forensics for Beginners."
But she's memorised:
An abandoned factory in Croydon—
armed police converge.
armed police converge.
"Victorian Sewers Revealed."
And he's left
flipping the pages
of "Sealed Room Mysteries,
Volume 4."
flipping the pages
of "Sealed Room Mysteries,
Volume 4."
She opens a small bookshop.
He's in there buying
"Should you Trust Books?"
They nod.
"Should you Trust Books?"
They nod.
Very sweet, the layout esp.! Tom
ReplyDeleteThanks Tom, it's good to know that a slightly more complex arrangement is working the way I intended...
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