From the beer garden
of the Prince of Wales
on Gloucester Road,
Bristol
you can see a high wall of white brick
clean as the tiled splashbacks
in the washrooms of expensive restaurants.
What we want
is not always
what is good for us.
What the wall wants
is a spray-paint cock and balls
the height of a giraffe.
What we feel most sharply
is sometimes what is missing.
Suppose, next year, something happens:
a religious revival
a ban on aerosols
or maybe we just grow up
and no-one
anymore
sketches cartoon genitals
(except for one professor
of prehistoric art
who pretends to be disappointed
when her students snigger).
It would be a changed world!
Like a world without war
or cruelty.
A better world –
but less familiar.
Would you fit in such a world?
What would you talk about?
How would you know what you were for
or against?
May you never be shown
what clean air could do to your lungs,
how you have raged against justice,
or what you did to love
when it found you.
Tom Sastry is a poet and spoken word artist living in Bristol. He was chosen by Carol Ann Duffy as one of the 2016 Laureate’s Choice poets and his debut pamphlet Complicity was published by Smith/Doorstop in October 2016.