Metal cogs turn,
my flesh is one and the same,
Chaplin’s muscles burn
but there’s still a smile on his face,
-
these suicide machines grind our bones
down into dust,
invincible, no longer shining, succumbing slow
to rust.
-
Concrete homes,
brutalist blocks,
workers’ eyes
on whirring clocks,
-
the factories
lick slime-endowed lips,
we make bunny ears
behind the boss’ back
for kicks.
-
The long walk home
is interrupted by the smog,
breathe it in deep,
it’s only two lungs that you’ve got,
-
the doctor’s machines grow loud
when processing your image,
you struggle for sleep
most nights these days
-
rare passings-out accompanied
by visions
of unending days,
-
tired legs running
on toxic fumes and
burning acid.
-
In dreams,
just like Brazil,
you fly free, above the clouds,
-
in dreams,
there are no drills,
there are no starving metal mouths,
-
in dreams,
there is no waking,
no more coming crashing down,
-
in dreams,
I plan on staying,
head held down until I drown.
-
We were born to run,
Springsteen begged us to do so,
but my feet are draped
in concrete,
and the chisels have turned blunt,
-
I feel this body rotting,
skeletal cage, forced to full throttle,
-
I was born to run
but the metal hands
still hold me
too tight.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…



Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.