FOLK SONG FOR THOMAS SPENCE
(1750-1814)
Down by the old Quayside,
I heard a young man cry,
among the nets and ships he made his way.
As the keelboats buzzed along,
he sang a seagull’s song;
he cried out for the Rights of you and me.
Oh lads, that man was Thomas Spence,
he gave up all his life
just to be free.
Up and down the cobbled Side,
struggling on through the Broad Chare,
he shouted out his wares
for you and me.
Oh lads, you should have seen him gan,
he was a man the likes you rarely see.
With a pamphlet in his hand,
and a poem at his command,
he haunts the Quayside still
and his words sing.
His folks they both were Scots,
sold socks and fishing nets,
through the Fog on the Tyne they plied their trade.
In this theatre of life,
the crying and the strife,
they tried to be decent and be strong.
Oh lads, that man was Thomas Spence,
he gave up all his life
just to be free.
Up and down the cobbled Side,
struggling on through the Broad Chare,
he shouted out his wares
for you and me.
Oh lads, you should have seen him gan,
he was a man the likes you rarely see.
With a pamphlet in his hand,
and a poem at his command,
he haunts the Quayside still
and his words sing.
KEITH ARMSTRONG
(from the music-theatre piece ‘Pig’s Meat’ written for Bruvvers Theatre Company)
TELL ME LIES ABOUT NORTHUMBERLAND
(in honour of Adrian Mitchell)
Say this land is ours,
these pipe tunes do not cry.
The birds all sing in dialect,
old miners breathe like dukes.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
Tell me it isn’t feudal,
that castles were built for us.
We never touch the forelock,
bend to scrape up dust.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
Your pretty girls don’t stink of slaughter,
your eyes don’t blur with myth.
You’re as equal as a duchess,
saints never smell of piss.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
Your roots are in this valley,
you were never from doon south.
You never hide your birthplace,
you’re a real poet of the north.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
The churches are not crumbling,
the congregations glow with hope.
We are different from the foreigner,
our poetry rhymes with wine.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
There is no landed gentry,
no homes locals can’t afford.
There’s no army on the moors,
the Romans freed us all.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
That the hurt is in the past,
the future holds no war.
Home rule is at our fingertips,
the Coquet swims with love.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
‘The Garden’ is our children’s,
Hotspur spurs us on.
The seagulls are not soaked in oil,
the cows are not diseased.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
This Kingdom is United,
‘Culture’ is our God.
Everyone’s a Basil Bunting freak,
there’s music everywhere.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
We will have our independence,
we’ll get the Gospels back.
We live off museums and tourists,
we don’t need boats or trades.
Tell me lies about Northumberland.
We’re in charge of our own futures,
we have north east citizens here.
In this autonomous republic,
we’re free as dicky birds.
So shut your eyes.
And tell me lies
about Northumberland.
KEITH ARMSTRONG
IN THE DEPARTMENT OF POETRY
‘Our paths
may cross again, they may not. But I wish you success for the future. I
don’t think you are a person who is easily defeated through life as you
are by nature a peacock which shows at times its beautiful feathers.’
(Margaretha den Broeden)
In the Department of Poetry something is stirring:
it is a rare bird shitting on a heap of certificates.
He bears the beautiful plumage of a rebel,
flying through the rigid corridors,
the stifling pall of academic twaddle.
He pecks at the Masters’ eggheads,
scratches pretty patterns along the cold walls of poetic power.
He cares not a jot for their fancy Awards,
their sycophantic perambulations,
degrees of literary incest.
These trophies for nepotism
pass this peculiar bird by
as he soars
high
above the paper quadrangle,
circling over the dying Heads of Culture,
singing sweet revolutionary songs,
showing off
his brilliant wings
that fly him
into the ecstasy
of a poem.
KEITH ARMSTRONG
AN OUBLIETTE FOR KITTYThere’s a hole in this Newcastle welcome,there’s a beggar with a broken spine.On Gallowgate, a heart is brokenand the ships have left the Tyne.So what becomes of this History of Pain?What is there left to hear?The kids pour down the Pudding Chare laneand drown a folksong in beer.So here is an oubliette for you, Kitty,somewhere to hide your face.The blood is streaming from fresh wounds in our cityand old scars are all over the place.There’s this dirt from a history of darknessand they’ve decked it in neon and glitz.There are traders in penthouse apartmentson the Quayside where sailors once pissed.So where are Hughie and Tommy, Kitty?,the ghosts of Geordies past?I don’t want to drown you in pitybut I saw someone fall from the past.So here is an oubliette for you, Kitty,somewhere to hide your face.The blood is streaming from fresh wounds in our cityand old scars are all over the place.While they bomb the bridges of Belgrade,they hand us a cluster of Cultureand tame Councillors flock in on a long cavalcadeto tug open the next civic sculpture.And who can teach you a heritage?Who can learn you a poem?We’re lost in a difficult, frightening, ageand no one can find what was home.So here is an oubliette for you, Kitty,somewhere to hide your face.The blood is streaming from fresh wounds in our cityand old scars are all over the place.So here is an oubliette for you, Kitty,somewhere to hide your face.The blood is streaming from fresh wounds in our cityand old scars are all over the place.KEITH ARMSTRONG
FAT MAN LODGED ON DOG LEAP STAIRSHe pounded the cobblesof the Castle Garth,bowling alongwith his brain hanging over his neckand his bellylooming over his huge pants.His overeducated headweighed a tonand bore downon an arsefattened on home- made pies.He was carrying a planfor the working classesbut forgot his heart was too small,dwarfed by his huge mouthand an expensive ego.He had a board meeting to go to,the big fart,and he sweated grantsas he blundered alongto the narrow alley.He was far too broad of beam reallybut he was late for everything,including his funeral,and thrust his plates of meatonto the slippery steps.History closed in on him,the Black Gate,the Keep,as if to tell himit wasn’t his,as if to say‘get out of my town’.He squeezed himself onto this narrow stairwayand, like his poetry,got stuck.He coudn’t movefor his lack of lyricism.The Fat Manwas firmly lodgedon Dog Leap Stairsand the crowsbegan to gatherto swoopand pickthe bloated powerfrom his face.KEITH ARMSTRONG
LAMENT FOR A WRITER DEAD
He died,
clinging on to his pen,
at six in the morning,
his usual stint.
He’d run out of anything to write about.
For years, he’d watched the world go by his study,
observing other people’s lives.
All he had to do was fill the page,
disengaged,
lacking in instinct,
without a history,
with no real vision of any particular community.
After all,
he knew he was
a writer,
a describer,
inscriber of someone else’s paving stones.
An expert on poetry,
with nothing much at all
to say.
KEITH ARMSTRONG
outside your lonely window
My God,
we are
indeed lucky,
in this great and ancient city,
to have,
in our presence,
such a poet as you.
Sometimes,
it even seems
that you
are bigger than us,
with your huge dome
dominating
our history.
Such an immense
and supreme
ego,
larger than the space
in Grainger Market.
And, when it comes to writing up our story,
we, of course,
must turn to you,
with your flawless technique
and structured craft,
turn to you
in our peasant
ignorance.
Since,
though we have folk songs,
they cannot do justice
to the language,
like you
above all,
can.
Perhaps,
next time,
before we break
into song,
we should ask you
to subject our voices
to your analysis.
But then
I don’t think,
in your padded academic tower,
that you can hear us all
singing
in the trees,
outside
your lonely window.
KEITH ARMSTRONG