Poems by Terry Stephen Driscoll

The Arches of Waterloo
It’s London and it’s 3am,
I’ve stopped to spare a thought for them,
Some once husbands,
Some once wives,
All once captains of their lives,
Corrugated castles warm
These settlers of the streets,
Vagrant knights of nocturne,
Share metholated teats,
Preachers don their gospel boards,
Bearing anecdotes,
Of biblical extraction,
And pointless holy quotes,
Drunks walk free of reason,
And dance a curbside dance,
The ballet of the bottle,
An alcoholic trance,
Others cluster comfort,
Surround an urn of tea,
That volunteers in rain or snow
Supply religiously,
Broken social senses,
Forsaken ways of life,
I reassessed my hardships,
How little I knew strife.
Copyright © 2002 Terry Stephen Driscoll • All rights reserved.
Photo: Copyright © David Gillanders Photography, +447974 920 189.
Photo: Copyright © David Gillanders Photography, +447974 920 189.
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