“This” (in case you can’t see it via the link above) was a glurgy piece of nostalgia porn misogyny masquerading as poetry. My emotions shifted through ennui to rage to disgust (and not just because of the font used) pretty quickly, briefly eased by Hannah’s magnificent rant against it.
But this is me, and it was lunchtime, so: riposte poem time:
Text version:
A Poem To Which I Can Relate
I remember the corned beef of my Childhood,
And the bread that we cut with a knife,
When the Children helped with the housework,
And the men went to work not the wife.
The cheese never needed a fridge,
And the bread was so crusty and hot,
The Children were seldom unhappy,
And the Wife was content with her lot.
I remember the milk from the bottle,
With the yummy cream on the top,
Our dinner came hot from the oven,
And not from a freezer; or shop.
The kids were a lot more contented,
They didn’t need money for kicks,
Just a game with their friends in the road,
And sometimes the Saturday flicks.
…
I remember the slap on my backside,
And the taste of soap if I swore
Anorexia and diets weren’t heard of
And we hadn’t much choice what we wore.
Do you think that bruised our ego?
Or our initiative was destroyed?
We ate what was put on the table
And I think life was better enjoyed.
Author
Unknown
|
A
Poem To Which WE Can Relate
The
silence that cut like a knife
Where
Children were seen and not heard
And
blows clamped down marital strife
The
Wife could not claim her possessions,
Worked
for nothing in kitchen and bed;
The
Children were gifted this vision:
That’s
your future until you are dead.
We remember
the Childhood diseases
That
took all but lucky or strong
Darwinianism
in action
And
no-one to challenge our wrongs.
We
gazed at the chasm dividing
The
have-nots from those haves who strode
Over
huge tracts of land that were paid for
By
theft, tax, and History’s goad.
Those
who were beaten learned nothing
Except
how to govern by fear
Girls
were pressed into corsets and wasted away
You
won’t learn if you don’t try to hear
The
privileged never do question
From
whence comes their food and their board
You
whine incognito as we change the world
With
your death rattle justly ignored.
Fay Roberts
|
The beautiful picture of Ruby Rose in the Westinghouse style was created by the ridiculously talented Eddie Holly.
Feel free to share if you like. A surprising number of people already have, which both weirds me out and gratifies me (yay! imposter syndrome!), and the original Facebook version is here.
UPDATE: Bloody hell - there's a longer version. Turns out the ... bit in the one to which I responded is to indicate where there were more lines, but the perpetrator pinched them out in order to be able to fit the meat of the “poem” on a single side of A4.