Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Arts Hub
    • Architecture
    • Fiction
    • Films
    • Life Writing
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
  • Culture Hub
    • Clothing & Fashion
    • Cultural Commentary
    • Eating & Drinking
    • Education
    • Festivals/ Events
    • Religion
    • Science & Technology
    • Sport
    • TV, internet and other media
  • Contributors
  • Books
  • E-books
  • Support Us
0 0
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: £0.00

Checkout

Free delivery in the UK.

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Arts Hub
    • Architecture
    • Fiction
    • Films
    • Life Writing
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
  • Culture Hub
    • Clothing & Fashion
    • Cultural Commentary
    • Eating & Drinking
    • Education
    • Festivals/ Events
    • Religion
    • Science & Technology
    • Sport
    • TV, internet and other media
  • Contributors
  • Books
  • E-books
  • Support Us
Facebook Twitter Instagram
0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: £0.00

Checkout

Free delivery in the UK.

Return to previous page
Home Blog Arts Hub Poetry

Factions

Factions

28 March 2024 /Posted byFran Lock
Post Views: 4,724

Factions

by Fran Lock

/ late diagnosis. it’s a language of dragnets and factions.
/ contractions and stammers. his slack-jaw gravitates.
/ to globalized consciousness. this corporate scorn, and sweet-talk.
/ drilled into flat writs. king stephen in the courts of contempt.
/ steel mesh over the eye. oscillating spotlights. yoke and arrows.
/ there was an anarchy. war of succession. war of spoils.
/ was a steel mesh over the memoir. bleats his upheaval. was a dunghill cock.
/ there was an anarchy. time-sheet stooges, scuppered duds.
/ these stadium basics. smug opportunists.
/ many and meanwhile. beguiled and distracted.
/ the houselights come up. the houselights come up on –
/ a lightweight nightmare, nightmarish finality.
/ his existential dread revoked.
/ interpretations and appraisals. was a botched demagogue.
/ the foreman. with this megaphone full of rancid parable.
/ the foreman. with his lung full of port talbot steel.
/ handshake. shiftwork. the fashionable rackets.
/ carries his spleen in a suitcase. carries his spleen in his handshake.
/ all the couch potatoes of discontent cover their faces.
/ late diagnosis. there was an anarchy.
/ packed meat into magnificent disguises. smiles.
/ was a cipher for dismay. climbs canker, spits from the top of it.
/ the houselights come up. the houselights come up on –
/ disposable spectres. temperent spectres deposed.
/ the drumroll, the punchline.
/ says: we don’t like posh boys, but we like their drugs.
/ in a showband burnout. the rarefied tyrant roars.
/ in a city like this. paranoia’s perspiration running down its pillars.
/ in a city like this. the pillars of his paranoia. doric.
/ ghosts in the rosy order of things.
/ the letdown of decades. the rapturous anticlimactic.
/ sin-sired. pockets full of poachers pentacles, dead disciplinarians, limbs and trivia.
/ punishments will be disproportionate, skewed.
/ language of drag, of drain. facile and tangled.
/ a language of purge and shudder. a language of –
/ threshing dismembered hungover fatalists.
/ there was an anarchy.
/ sober and shattered. an alternate hell with hand-sanitizer. alternative hell with hotel bible.
/ and he was our monarch. those forgery years.
/ all his complaint in his face.
/ little land of wrecked hawks and burnt rubber.
/ tarmac over this tax-year, these catchy tunes.
/ chilled and flinching. i saw him empty his accident into –
/ imperial derelict seaside town.
/ cleaved and alive by the rain.
/ lashed to the stammer. contraction.
/ the mute, egregious weather.
/ kids swarm everywhere, the wolf milieu. off their nuts.
/ changelings of normalised knife-crime. ramsgate.
/ there was an anarchy. cringe in edwardian bafflement.
/ the listed buildings. mournful toytown incantations.
/ says: levelled up? nah. just levelled.
/ all our phosphorus wants returned.
/ this is grunting stuff. a broken-tooth bestride a song.
/ their aggravating swagger. these southern-fried flatterers. the stink on them.
/ a crack rock’s phobic prelude to their bloody life story.
/ the rabble, woozily rallied.
/ i heard there were ballads for this.
/ for the anarchy.
/ for the untutored instruments: hands. tongue.
/ the thumping muscle of me. for –
/ late diagnosis.
/ oh, pedant redeemer, scorched and thwarted. your tarot of thwarted slang.
/ do you not have a spell for the anarchy?
/ these dismal syllabists. the fagends of faction.
/ stanzaed neanderthals. marshal thralls of phrase.
/ then the houselights come up. the houselights come up on –
/ a deadpan parody of bluebirds.
/ the wind distilling his sneer.
/ to coruscating truculence. chapel of wrath.
/ on the hill. in the rain. empty of all except –
/ late diagnosis. factions filling me. filling me up.

The image above is also by Fran Lock

Share Post
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Mail to friend
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
Maybe Monday
Hue and Cry, and Labour’...

About author

Avatar photo

About Author

Fran Lock

Fran Lock Ph.D. is a writer, activist, and the author of seven poetry collections and numerous chapbooks. She is an Associate Editor of Culture Matters.

Other posts by Fran Lock

Related posts

Arts Hub
Read more

Posters

Posted byMark Cassidy
Post Views: 73 Brum against the NF, 18-02-1978 By Mark Cassidy Fascists never entirely go away, do they? They may disappear from view for a... Continue reading
Arts Hub
Read more

If…..

Posted byMartin Rowson
Post Views: 239 Poem – and sculpture carved from Ye Old Oak ham – by Martin Rowson If… If you could keep your head when... Continue reading
Arts Hub
Read more

Eve of June 13th 2026, Brighton

Posted byPauline Sewards
Post Views: 559 By Pauline Sewards The city has one more uneasy sleep to go some businesses have capitulated, planning closureothers quietly assert their right... Continue reading
Arts Hub
Read more

A wall

Posted byRoger Cornish
Post Views: 111 By Roger Cornish They pulled a wallDown – a while agoThe times they were aChanging The provident manStopped coming onFridaysYou didn’t need... Continue reading
Arts Hub
Read more

FORECAST

Posted bySteven Taylor
Post Views: 95 By Steven Taylor the weather will kill people this weekbut many of them would have died anywayand we need weather more than... Continue reading

Categories

  • About us
  • Architecture
  • Arts Hub
  • Clothing & Fashion
  • Cultural Commentary
  • Culture Hub
  • Eating & Drinking
  • Education
  • Festivals/ Events
  • Fiction
  • Films
  • Life Writing
  • Life Writing
  • Music
  • Poetry
  • Religion
  • Round-up
  • Science & Technology
  • Sport
  • The 1917 Russian Revolution
  • Theatre
  • TV, internet and other media
  • Visual Arts
Recent Popular

Bass, Big Beer & popular demand

2 July 2026 Comments Off on Bass, Big Beer & popular demand

Posters

2 July 2026 Comments Off on Posters

If…..

28 June 2026 Comments Off on If…..

Eve of June 13th 2026, Brighton

23 June 2026 Comments Off on Eve of June 13th 2026, Brighton

Contributors to Culture Matters

17 October 2017 Comments Off on Contributors to Culture Matters

The radical imagery of William Blake

2 March 2021 Comments Off on The radical imagery of William Blake

Music and Marxism

7 June 2016 Comments Off on Music and Marxism

About Us

23 December 2015 Comments Off on About Us

Tags Cloud

bbc Black Lives Matter Boris Johnson Brecht communism Covid19 Cultural democracy cultural struggle Donald Trump English Revolution Gaza Gaza genocide Genocide in Gaza George Orwell Hitler IDF Illegal war on Iran Iran Israeli bombing Israeli war crimes jeremy corbyn Jesus Karl Marx Keir Starmer Marx marxism Miners' Strike Miners' Strike 1984 Netanyahu Netflix Palestine Palestine Action poetry Raymond Williams Reform UK refugees Rishi Sunak Russian Revolution Shakespeare Spanish Civil War Starmer Starvation in Gaza by Israel Trump Ukraine william morris

Search

Print

follow us on our Social Networks

Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube

Copyright © 2016 - 2024 Culture Matters Co-operative Ltd; FCA Registration No: 4347; Registered office: 30 Glenbrooke Terrace, Gateshead, NE9 6AJ. All rights reserved.

Home
Support Us
Books