09-26-2015, 01:59 AM
(09-25-2015, 10:18 PM)tectak Wrote: She said she had noticed a pull to the rightOnly joking.
whenever the brakes were applied.
My wife had remarked, and I felt it a slight,
that to fix it, I never had tried.
Of course, I had made every possible check
but nothing was found and what’s more,
whilst searching beneath I’d accrued a stiff neck
and a bruise on my head from the door.
It seemed that my injuries offered no proof
of my fervent desire to please;
with sympathy none, she remained quite aloof,
though I proffered up badly grazed knees.
To no real avail, I picked up all my tools, Stopped reading at this point because of the superfluous word 'all'.
a hammer, a saw and some glue.
and went to the pub, for I’m nobody’s fool,
where in drink, my anxiety grew.
It grew as I took off the wheel with a wrench
that I’d borrowed from George, and my jack,
now rusty from rain, from the outdoor work-bench
of a neighbour… it never came back.
It grew as I hammered to dislodge the disc
with a mallet I’d borrowed from Pete.
I knew in my gut that it would only shift
with controlled application of heat.
I borrowed a blow-torch, the gas type, you know,
from a chap that I’d met in the snug.
After only an hour I’d got it to go
so I gave it full blast…and a tug.
It grew as the whole thing fell off with a clang
and a flaring of brake fluid lost.
Things dangled on brake-pipe where they shouldn't hang
…and it grew as I though of the cost.
Well now, to the root of the matter I came;
with the disc bent and cylinder cracked.
If she said JUST ONE WORD, I knew who to blame.
(…and she always kept one suitcase packed)
With blood and with sweat and with tears for a day
I had strained; for myself, not a care.
Sans tea, sans lunch, sans a working man’s pay….
and the tyre just needed some air.
tectak.
uncertain date but around 1964. Neighbour's Triumph Herald story. For Keith. Those were the days.....
Passed my test in a 1360 Herald. Fond memories.
A poet who can't make the language sing doesn't start. Hence the shortage of real poems amongst the global planktonic field of duds. - Clive James.

