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kooldude23
20-03-2006, 05:11 PM
I am trying to find th text for the poem Homecoming By Simon Armitage, but i can only find sites telling me what the poem is about !

Does anyone no were i can get my hands on it ?

(Sorry if this is in the wrong forum)

Charlie
20-03-2006, 05:23 PM
Search the name on google?

Tash.
20-03-2006, 05:36 PM
I took the liberty of writing it out for you - lmao i was bored :P

Think, two things on their own and both at once.
The first, that excercise in trust, where those in front
stand with their arms spread wide and free-fall
backwards, blind, and those behind take all the weight.

The second, one canary-yellow cotton jacket
on a cloakroom floor, uncoupled from its hook,
becoming scuffed and blackened underfoot. Back home
the very model of a mother, yours, puts
two and two together, makes a proper fist of it
and points the finger. Temper, temper. Questions
in the house. You seeing red. Blue murder. Bed.

Then midnight when you slip the latch and sneak
no further than the call-box at the corner of the street;
I'm waiitng by the phone, although it doesn't ring
because it's sixteen years or so before we'll meet.
Retrace that walk towards the garden gate; in silhouette
a father figure waits there, wants to set things straight.

These ribs are pleats or seams. These arms are sleeves.
These fingertips are buttons, or these hands can fold
into a clasp, or else these fingers make a zip
or buckle, you say which. Step backwards into it
and try the same canary-yellow cotton jacket, there,
like this, for size again. It still fits.

Thats how its set out on the page and everything. Hope i helped ;)

kooldude23
20-03-2006, 06:17 PM
I took the liberty of writing it out for you - lmao i was bored :P

Think, two things on their own and both at once.
The first, that excercise in trust, where those in front
stand with their arms spread wide and free-fall
backwards, blind, and those behind take all the weight.

The second, one canary-yellow cotton jacket
on a cloakroom floor, uncoupled from its hook,
becoming scuffed and blackened underfoot. Back home
the very model of a mother, yours, puts
two and two together, makes a proper fist of it
and points the finger. Temper, temper. Questions
in the house. You seeing red. Blue murder. Bed.

Then midnight when you slip the latch and sneak
no further than the call-box at the corner of the street;
I'm waiitng by the phone, although it doesn't ring
because it's sixteen years or so before we'll meet.
Retrace that walk towards the garden gate; in silhouette
a father figure waits there, wants to set things straight.

These ribs are pleats or seams. These arms are sleeves.
These fingertips are buttons, or these hands can fold
into a clasp, or else these fingers make a zip
or buckle, you say which. Step backwards into it
and try the same canary-yellow cotton jacket, there,
like this, for size again. It still fits.

Thats how its set out on the page and everything. Hope i helped ;)
Thanks alot, i love this poem :D
+Rep

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