Larkin’ About (with Toads)
I'm out and about
In the centre of Hull
Doing nowt, just
Larkin’ about
When I met this toad
And his mates who were on
the pull,
There, sitting in my
abode!
Are you squatting on my
life
And what’s your score?
It’s a plague and it’s
rife.
The toads are Larkin
about
It’s the “Dead Poets’
Society
And they've found the
door;
Now together we’re
doing nowt
Enjoying the notoriety!
‘Ullness’
They say, ‘th’s nowt as
queer as folk!’
And it’s true if when
you cum to ‘ull,
Our accent is unique
and bespoke!
Life’s neer boring or
dull!
What is about our ‘Ullness?’
Cum and find our
fullness!
Is it something in the Humber
water
That causes the genes
to mutate
Or is our lot, just a
strange quarter?
Your visit we eagerly
await
That you can taste our
‘Ullness’
And enjoy the cultural
fullness!
They says, ‘Ull’s too
far and out on a limb’
And somewhere we've neer
bin,
But I tell you, ‘Life
is neer that grim!’
How can you say if th’s
neer sin?
Cum and experience our
‘Ullness’
Your life will find a
new fullness!
Echoes of the Humber
By the banks of the
Humber
In the land of the
Green Ginger
I saw the red, red
robin
Go bob, bobbing along,
But he wasn't an early
bird
Singing in any kind of
weather.
There is the KC but the
sunshine band
Like the House Martins
have flown
Far beyond the
Beautiful South!
The Rats and the
Spiders from Mars
Have deserted the pied
piper,
The Fine Young
Cannibals
Have eaten Every Thing
but the Girl,
But the echoes of the
Humber
Beggar’s Opera (Hull Night Life)
The bells of Holy
Trinity
Are ringing out with
unrest,
And from King Billy
To the land of the
Green Ginger
People are walking;
People are talking
But too many
Quasimodo’s
Are looking in their
mirrors
Thinking all their
Esmeralda’s
Will dance the night
away,
And love is a many
splendour thing.
The oracles of the
heralds
Are ringing out with
anger
And from the Hull Truck
To the boards of the
New Theatre
People are fighting;
People are writing
But too many
Shakespeare’s
Are penning their
sonnets
Thinking all their
Juliet’s
Will appear on the
veranda
And love is a many
splendour thing.
2017 City of Culture
Character and charm with an
Identity second to none
That’s what they’re saying about
You and I
Opportunities for
Friendships and families alike
Common people and yet
Unique in every way
Listening to the sounds of the Humber
Tigers, Robins and Early Birds
Ullness, nothing like it
Riches that money can’t buy
Everyone is welcome in Hull!
Tribute to JHG
It
started with a kiss but it only produced
Blood,
sweat and tears, he only had
One
gym and tonic, was he on the piste?
Was the crown prince Really Julius Caesar
Though
going Dutch was the next best thing
To
being dressed in a black tie and tales.
It
was supposed to be April in Paris
But
it ended up a weekend break in our house
There
was Oliver Twist and Moby Dick,
Passion
killers from the office party,
Wrestling
mad shakers with the weed,
Unleashed
like lucky sods at a reunion.
I
was singing a funny tune, hooray for Hollywood
But
there was big trouble in a little bedroom,
Fly
me to the moon was my departure
As
Dracula was hoping for seasons in the sun
But
it was the teechers with the perfect pitch
But
I was the salt of the earth, up ‘n’ under.
Who’d
be a Whaler?
I've sat by the banks of the Humber
Watching the tide ebb and flow
And dreamt in my slumber-
Where did the whalers go?
Far beyond the North Sea
And northward to the Atlantic swell,
Not a place for you or me,
Not a place to dwell;
But they didn't stop there
Into Arctic waters they sailed,
Did they have a care
As they whaled?
Who’d be a whaler? Who’d be a sailor?
That’s what my ‘Truelove’ asked of me
‘Diana, don’t wait up for me!’
Who’d be a whaler? Who’d be a sailor?
But it’ll be many day till I return
Our livelihood is my concern!
I’ve stood on the banks of the Humber
Feeling the cold biting wind
That woke me from my slumber-
Jack Frost truly grinned
And entertained the whalers,
As they entered the Arctic waters
Amid ice packs, O frozen sailors
Where are your wives, sons and
daughters?
Do they really know the perils you face?
Davy Jones you also know well,
Some of you disappeared without trace
Amidst that Godless frozen Arctic swell!
The Land of Green Ginger (HU1 2EB)
I was walking down Old
Beverley Street
I stopped to have a
tipple or two in the George
And looked through the
littlest window
That is to be found in
England’s fair land,
There I discovered
Robinson Crusoe setting sail,
Was to the Land of
Green Ginger?
It was not the Bethia (Bounty)
he set sail on
With the bonny Captain
Blight and crew,
Oh no! Splice the
mainbrace is what I say
And drink to those who
walk these streets
Adorning the City of
Hull with uniqueness,
Revelling in the Land
of Green Ginger!
For the moment let the
time pass by gently
And muse at world
rushing by you, pause;
There are stranger
places we could speak of
But the there is none
like the Green Ginger,
And whatever it beholds
to you, just remember
It is spicy, and it is
Hull through and through!
Hull
Fair
The October fog rolls
in over the Humber
Along with the Romany
folk of the fair
And it’s a city week
without slumber,
A time for the gaudy
dazzle and flare!
I ask, ‘does anyone
really, really care
When they experience
all the fun of the fair?’
Walton Street is awash
with the milling crowd
And the aroma of Bob
Carver’s fills the air,
The screams and yells
of the night are loud,
The thrills and spills,
all ages do share.
I ask, ‘candy flossers
and brandy snappers,
Are you happy with your
city dappers?’
Dodgems and waltzers
constantly spin,
Fortune tellers reading
unsuspecting palms;
Hook a duck and a
goldfish you’ll win.
What is the mystery,
the magical charm?
That is for you and me
to contemplate
As we pencil in the
pending date!
The sights and sounds
soon fade away
But the memories remain
much longer,
And we know we enjoyed
that Fair day;
Do the traditions ever
grow stronger?
That is for you my
friend to answer,
My autumn flower, my Hull Fair
romancer!
AJ and Jason
If you look up to the
skies of blue
And see a gypsy moth in
flight,
It’s only Jason and A.J. you’ll view
Flying into the evening
twilight;
Flying east and south
to Australia,
A Hull lass in a
pilot’s regalia!
Across land and sea,
never the like
Did our heroine venture
so far!
Jason, she was an
adventurous tyke
And she led you by the
Southern star;
Where are you now I
muse and ponder?
Somewhere above in the
blue yonder!
Fly on A.J.; fly on O
lady of the sky,
And let your pioneering
spirit soar,
May your memory remain
on high!
Fly on A.J., fly on and
explore,
And we down below will
look above
And cherish the Hull
lass we love!
Republican
Memories (abridge version)
It was the spring of 42
When Charlie and his cronies
Came up to old York town,
He wasn't interested in
The Ebor handicap; Oh no!
He sought the beloved Arsenal
And the city of Hull!
So my republican friends
Let us meet in the plotting room
In ‘Ye Olde White Harte’
And raise a glass to Sir John
And those who stood with him;
Let us defy those who oppose us
And live as ‘All men are equal’
It was on the 23rd April
On a wet Saturday morning
When Charlie came to Hull.’
There at the Beverley Bar
And started a chain of events
That gave way to the Civil War.
So my republican friends
Let us raise the rebel cry
To the divine right of kings
And from all southern softies,
Good Lord! Deliver us!
Come my republican friends,
Let us raise a glass of cheer!
A Divided City
It’s more than a river
that separates the two halves
And never the twain
shall meet or dwell together.
Red and White or Black
and White scarves,
The Robins or Early
Birds, you’ll never tether.
Holderness Road and
Hessle Road,
Divided loyalties of
the East and West
Its Hull Rugby League
unwritten code,
What colour is your twitter
crest?
It’s something that you
inherit from your history
And that constantly
flows through the veins,
To FC or Rovers you
belong, that’s the mystery;
Boulevard or Craven
Park reigns.
Bragging rights is the
order of the day
And songs of victory to
silence the other;
Which fans will have
the final say
When they speak of
their lover?
A Bridge Too Far
A bridge too late, a
bridge too far,
A bridge too dear, a
bridge of sighs;
But who hears your
enigmatic cries
And who travels across
you by car?
Alas! Still both sides
of the Humber
In back waters forever
slumber.
On the northern bank,
eastern tykes
And on the southern
bank, yellow bellies
But never the twain
could meet;
The river with its
currents and likes
Weighed constantly on
one’s nellies,
Neither side could be
complete!
A bridge too big, a
bridge too grand,
A bridge too costly, a
bridge of tears:
A burdensome debt for
many years
That spans a gulf to
the nether-land.
Alas! Still both sides
of the Humber
In stagnant waters
forever slumber.
MV Gaul H243 (Tribute)
Deep calls
unto deep
In the
depths of the Barents Sea,
And the
memories of the 36
Like the
tidal waters
Ever flow
back to the Humber.
Fathers,
sons and lovers
Have paid
the ultimate price,
Yet we who
are left
Bear the
greater cost
Of
remembering those love ones.
Trawl away
you fishermen,
Haul away
your nets,
Let them
down into the depths;
For our
thoughts
Are filled
with your memories!
Tribute to Wm. Wilberforce
A giant amongst men and
without equal
Who dared to challenge an
unjust society!
A Hull lad whose Christian
conviction
Led him to seek freedom
for the slave!
Let us too walk in his
godly footsteps
And treat all men with
the same respect,
For this is an eternal
and divine creed
That all men are
created equal!
So when you walk the
streets of Hull,
And wander down High
Street
Remember this city’s
famous son
And the legacy he gave
to all men!
Travel anywhere in this
world
And ask any emancipated
slave
That he owes his
freedom to
That Hull born son, Wm.
Wilberforce!
Bob Carver’s (9 Trinity Wharf, HU1 2JA)
Where would Hull be
without Bob Carver’s?
They've been around in
the city for 125 plus years
And they’ll still
frying when I'm battered and gone,
Will I taste as good to
the worms and their mates
When they come to dine
at my funeral feast
As to those pattie,
peas and chips I've tasted.
Would Hull Fair be same
if Bob wasn't there
With his stall selling
those culinary delights.
It goes without saying
the aromas wafting
In those October nights
are so seductive.
Taste buds aroused and
lips a licking
And don’t forget those
scraps as well!
Purrfect!
As a lad I was taken to
Craven Park
But I never got into
that rugby lark
And those red, red
robins
That go bob, bob,
bobbing along
Was never going to be
my song!
The Boulevard was just
the same
Rugby league is not my
game,
The weather was never
right
Though the clover was
white
But Old Faithful was
not my delight!
Boothferry Park was the
place
That set my heart
ablaze
With the beautiful
game:
It was the Tiger’s name
That roared with fame!
The Deep
We’ll meet at Sammy’s
point on the Humber,
By the River Hull tidal
surge barrier;
We’ll explore the
depths of the deep
And view those
creatures of the ocean.
We know many went to
the sea in ships,
Doing their business on
the great waters;
They saw the wondrous deeds
of the Lord,
At his commanded the
stormy wind arose.
The waves of the sea
mounted up to heaven.
And then crashed down
to the depths;
Those sailors and
fishermen cried to the Lord
As the perils of the
deep were unleashed.
From their trouble he
delivered them,
From their distress he stilled
the storm,
And the waves of the
sea were hushed;
And he brought them to
their desired haven.
Remember the cost of
such men in their boats
Who sailed the seven
seas far from these shores,
Remember as you look at
the marine life
That they too saw them
first and marvelled.
Tribute to Beatrice Bellman
It wasn't our Beatie
that phoned home, was it?
Like ET she didn't use
KC, rather BT!
But it’s good to talk
to Mother Szpilman
And don’t forget Aunt
Eller as well
She was a smashing bird
I used to know!
Do you remember
Countess Esmeralda?
Well that was a right
carry on I must say,
But who was the lady in
the bed?
Some say it was Mrs
Samsa parading
As metamorphosis of
Margaret Thatcher!
The characters you meet
in Coronation Street
Such as Lilian Spencer,
what happened to her?
Then what about Sheila
Haddon all at No.20
As well as Brenda
having the knowledge!
Could Enid Blyton write
such stories?
What will we say of
Beatrice Bellman?
That she’s everyone’s
grandma,
Always there with a
smile and a tale to tell,
It wouldn't be the same
if we didn't have someone,
Someone like Beatie on
the end of the phone!
Offside (tribute to
Ebenezer Cobb Morley)
With the passing years
Memory Lane seems a lot
longer,
And in that distant
past
A forgotten legend’s
story is not told!
O city of
culture to be
Why did
you forget this Hull lad?
Did he
give the world a gift?
That what
we call the beautiful game!
Ebenezer
Cobb Morley,
His name
should stand tall and proud
Outside
the KC Stadium
For his
roots began in his native city!
Who is
this gentleman?
He gave
us football’s rules,
He was
the first FA Secretary
And it’s
second President!
Here’s to
Oliver Harsley
For
raising such a fitting challenge
To all
genuine football fans alike;
That we
in Hull should remember ECM!
Silver Cod Days
Gone are the days of
the BTF and the silver cod,
Gone is the Arctic
Warrior, the Falstaff,
And the Somerset Maugham and all the rest;
No more
three day millionaires!
The ghost
of St Andrew now walks a lonely path
Along Hessle
Road looking for the dock;
Those memories like the
tide, is still on the ebb.
Halcyon days! Of their
like we’ll never see again,
EU membership and
Icelandic cod wars;
Oh you trawler boys you
were too successful
And we’ve all paid a
princely sum for our cod.
Your livelihood like
the shoals have dwindled
And now our fish and
chips are luxury item.
The silver cod where now do
you swim?
O where are the
skippers and their crews,
Your Poseidon
adventures are now long past;
Arctic Warrior,
Kirkella, Lancella, Lord Beatty,
Falstaff, Prince
Charles, Northella,
Stella Leonis, Somerset
Maugham, Primella.
Gone are the Silver
Cod-heads and the glory
Consigned to Hull’s
fishing heritage!
Dead Man’s Penny (1914-18)
To the great conflict
they went willing,
A matter of duty and
honour to king and country
Never knowing the
carnage, the killing!
Four Pals Battalions,
Hull gladly gave,
The best of their youth
and in their prime
But many would find an
early grave!
How much did their mothers
and wives weep
And the children miss
their father’s embrace,
Scars and mortal
wounds, forever deep!
What a wage – a dead
man’s penny,
Is this the ultimate price
for freedom and honour?
Let our thanksgiving be
for the many!
Where are those
memorials today?
Sadly missing like our
fallen heroes,
Do you hear their
whispers say......
‘We did not die for
your vanity
But gave up our
tomorrows in this horror,
All for the good of all
humanity’!
These are some of my poetry about Hull, its history, culture and heritage, its people etc.