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The Saturday Poem: With Joe on Silver Street

Written By Unknown on Saturday, February 1, 2014 | 3:11 AM


by Helen Tookey


Tuesday 1 August 1967


Said goodbye to Kenneth this morning. He seemed odd. On the spur of the moment I asked if he wanted to come home to Leicester with me. He looked surprised and said, 'No.'


– from the diary of Joe Orton


In scratty fake-fur jackets, jaunty caps

and baseball boots we saunter Silver Street,

skiving our ls: it's Siwver Street to slack-

mouthed Midlanders like us, who can't be arsed

with alveolar laterals. Of course,

RADA and elocution did the trick,

but still you keep a hint of Saffron Lane –

it charms the pants off Peggy and the rest,

just like the coat: 'Cheap clothes suit me,' you smirked,

'It's cos I'm from the gutter'; and it works,

they're all down on their knees, lapping it up.

Sometimes I think I hate you, Joe: I can

be cruel, but cruelty is something pure

for you, a fire that kills and makes things clean

and true; and I know anger, but the rage

that shoots your star high through the London nights

is something I'm afraid to face. You've travelled

far beyond me, Joe, and you don't plan

on coming back, I know; but here we are

on Silver Street, and look, in black and white,

that little word you never had the time

to strike out from those last blind lines, Joe: home.


• From Missel-Child (Carcanet, £9.95). To order a copy for £7.96 with free UK p&p go to guardianbookshop.co.uk or call Guardian book service on 0330 333 6846.





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