[This is yet another lazy repost in response to the 14th Finding Everyday Inspiration prompt https://dailypost.wordpress.com/blogging-university/writing-everyday-inspiration/. I have altered the poem very slightly since I last posted it a couple of years ago.]
Daylight Hours
Day begins with the deserted streets a sea
of discarded kebab-wrappers
blown by gentle wind
through pools of puke
deposited outside pubs.
*
Huddled figures finish late-shifts
or are off to an early start.
Papers replete with right-wing propaganda
pile up outside newsagents and are bought up by curious workers along the way.
and street-sweepers with
their water jets and whirring machines
appear in the crisp light of a sun
peeking and winking at them
round the corners and in the windows
of a low-rise landscape of benign limestone buildings
that is home.
*
The veins of the city clog
with vehicles
in treacly slow-moving lines.
Car-parks and pavements fill.
Shops and schools open their doors with a yawn.
Traffic-police and caretakers do their job.
*
Food trucks line up
and those already obese
queue up to punctuate their work
with lunchtime treats
under a sweltering mid-day sun.
Sweat their way back to work.
*
The afternoon,
since siestas became unacceptable,
is a long sinking feeling
declining towards evening,
buoyed by spoonfuls of sugar in coffee cups,
as birds chirp and congregate to roost
and the petals of flowers close up shop for the night.
Bats wheel around in the dusk,
swooping down to pick up discarded fruit.
The litter pickers with their children’s unwashed unshod
feet dangling from the back of a cart do their rounds.
Dad’s wiry muscles sternly humping rubbish up onto the flat bed
of a truck. Mom up the duff again. Kids messing around.
Shouting.
*
A slow parade of cars
wends its way honkingly homewards
to luxury apartments, perched high in the descending night,
under the sliver of a new moon.
[…] Daylight Hours […]