I’ve
always liked this poem by Englishman Roger McGough, who recently celebrated his 82nd birthday. I thought of it
again yesterday when the new-fallen snow covered our
streets, sidewalks and yards – unblemished but just waiting for
the tread of neighborhood kids’ feet and tire tracks.
Sleeping In
Our
street is dead lazy
Especially
in winter.
Some
mornings you wake up
And
it’s still lying there
Saying nothing. Huddled
under its white counterpane.
But soon the lorries arrive
Like angry Mums,
Pull back the blankets
And send it shivering
Off to work.
McGough,
by the way, grew up in Liverpool, home to another rather well-known group of lads who
made their way in the performance industry under the name The Beatles. In the 1960s, McGough started making a name
in his own right with the publication of his best-selling poetry book The
Mersey Sound. under its white counterpane.
But soon the lorries arrive
Like angry Mums,
Pull back the blankets
And send it shivering
Off to work.
Since then he’s led a highly successful writing career as a performance poet, children’s author
and playwright. A broadcaster, too, he
hosts the BBC’s “Poetry Please” show and still makes his home in the Mersey
area of Liverpool.
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