|
Eddie Gibbons
Eddie Gibbons was born in Liverpool. He has lived in Aberdeen for 25 years. His publications to date are: Stations of the Heart (1999) Thirsty Books; The Republic of Ted (2002) Thirsty Books; Three Way Street (2004) (with Gerard Rochford and Douglas W. Gray) Koo Press, Aberdeen; Zugzwang (2005) (with Robert Guzder) Koo Press, Aberdeen, and Game On!, a book of football poetry (2006) Thirsty Books.
Poems
AT MELTING POINT
I am here and you are there. As a couple we are incomplete. Perhaps the two of us should meet at Melting Point in Golden Square.
I promise I will be discreet. You’ll hardly even know I’m there. You say you might as well stay where? At Freezing Point on Silver Street?
Then meet me at the Lemon Tree. Last year I nearly met you there. Or that place we missed by inches. Where? Yes – Books and Beans, if you are free.
Please sit at that window seat I walked straight past this time last year. Tonight I won’t be late, I swear. Where’s Freezing Point on Silver Street?
I am here and you are there. Without you I am incomplete. One of us, at least, should meet at Melting Point in Golden Square.
Return to top
|
THE STARLIGHT CUP
Two coats are best for posts. The bar defined by stars. The ball, a small elusive animal at twilight.
Two kids are best for this, this game without a name; this thrall, this all-consuming spell of moonlight.
Hours are devoured. Dark is the park. In a blink the Sink estate fades from view.
Sounds are muffled, baffled in the lee of trees. Only one stark bark pierces through.
The Dream Team plays deep into the night; no fright will scare them aware, shake their belief
that there’s no relegation from imagination – nothing in the street can beat this wakeful sleep.
The prize they win tonight is theirs to keep.
Return to top
|
RITUAL
Some run on the pitch for their first kick, others touch the grass, lift the hand to their mouths, kiss a finger, bless themselves, and this is a sacrament, a wish for assistance to assess the flight of the toss, the height of the pass, the weight of the cross.
Return to top
|
THE SCORE
Having missed a score of chances, the goal the scorer thought he’d scored was scratched off the scoresheet for offside,
so the scoreline remained scoreless. A win would have secured the club – their name inscribed on the cup.
Instead, they had a score to settle with the referee, who manifestly had not scored for seasons.
As if to underscore the sore feelings (the goal was a scorcher) the forward fuelled the discord
by his scurrilous retorts to the linesman – his scorching invective pouring scorn on the poor man’s bloodline.
Perilously close to physical assault, Security provided his sour encore – he was summarily escorted from the pitch.
His manager’s shrug offered little succour – he’d been in the game long enough to known the score.
Return to top
|
THE LIMERICK OF ANGELA'S ASHES
There was a young urchin called Frank whose childhood apparently stank. His mother’s ashes made him stashes which he locks in a Limerick bank.
Return to top
|
TAKING OFF EMILY DICKINSON’S KIT
It was harder for poor Billy C. – He was the first to navigate Those catches, straps and whalebone stays.
The task should be much easier today – I have only to negotiate Her strip sans frippery or lingerie.
Her Arctic Ms.demeanour suits The film of Wintergreen she’s spread From calf to frigid inner thigh.
Loaded guns, her ten-league boots – For midweek and for Saturdays – (She shuns the Sabbath games on Sky.)
A froidian slip? A hint of thaw? Before the match I saw her touch The This Is Amherst sign.
Bewildered by her no-score drawers, That act of passion made me clutch Her bonnet at full time.
Alas! Her boots were too straight-laced. When I offered to remove her kit She made a sudden dash for it –
Return to top
|
|