Poem 52
Wat Tyler, leader of the Peasants’ Revolt, ended up with his head on a pike on London Bridge after the 14 year old Richard II turned the moment of Wat’s murder into a victory for himself …
( I like the freewheeling form of this … Orangutan Arms, woolly fireworks, the double meaning of show me round the town … I thought I’d made up draggle but turns out it’s a real word … )
Like Wat
I woke up this morning feeling like Wat Tyler that it's a long way to walk just to die I've got this idea for a band called Wat Tyler playing live insurrection Mondays through Thursday at the Orangutan Arms rang in sick with a touch of the Wat Tylers when I'd rather be the boy king full of colossal white words riding out on the field and getting the crowd going getting the caps flying like woolly fireworks … go home go home you've seen the outskirts of a beautiful city you've seen a bit of blood that wasn't yours you've spoken to the King (hurrah) now take your starvation back I feel like Wat Tyler permanently on the end of a quick squidge with something sharp doomed to trust the wrong man to see them all go draggling back home again and be so happy to go with them if these soldiers hadn't made arrangements to show me round the town