Nostalgia Ain’t Wot it Used to Be

       Nostalgia Ain’t

     Wot it Used to Be

The adolescent brilliance finds itself

Entrapped once more in Charleville.  He finds

His genius brusquely returned to the shelf

Of mère and provincialisme.  This blinds

Him so much that he cannot see his way

To anything other than graffiti

Of the crudest sort.  He daubs a display,

“Shit on God.”  It isn’t an entreaty

The poet makes or a demand.  Despair

Is ghost-writing with Rimbaud’s teenaged fist,

Reduced to scrawling in the city square

On park benches castratedly while pissed.

  This blot is briefly scored out from his head

    In splatting moments in a Camden bed.