27 Nov The Common. Posted at 22:17h in Poetry by flingthe 0 Comments From high upon an armoured hillI gazed upon a busy fieldWhere rank and title mattered nilIn widespread use, the common weal.At sport or play or solo runRedoubt where gold held meagre weightAnd stories true and not were spunA passing stay from weary fate.As much a thought as was a placeThose piggish men could not intrudeAnd where that cold, demanding faceCould be ignored, though interlude.Yet gluttony will find a wayTo claim its own the common threadDemand a fee the rest must payThe public ward but turns its head.Withal they need the working folkTheir riches hold lives’ labours lostWho shackled to eternal yolkWhose silent shadows bear the cost.Hear the well-heeled clamoured roar For what one time belonged to allTo sack resource and pillage storeAnd demonize the social call.And feint us into want and buyAnd foist on us a phony priceAnd mock us if we go awryAnd offer us a slender slice.And purchased by their loot and tricksThe quisling press does clamour soFor private gain, communal risk.The lavish few, the teeming woe.‘Tis not for them the common goodWhen civic guard’s so easy boughtAnd hunt down modern Robin HoodsAnd wash their hands of what they’ve wrought.The Common now lies fenced and tilledThe people gone, the fields, the purseThe guzzling gang is hardly filledThe mass dismissed to moan and curse.And thus it costs us ever moreTo eat, to learn, to laugh, to splintWhile the bloated, corporate whoreSits belching gas and needs a mint.Copyright Paul Heno February 2011
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