Back from the Thelemic symposium
or the Lodge of the Silver Whatever,
there must have been a time
when I went straight to the dole
to claim my fortnightly stipend.
Had there been grillings in those days
 I would have gladly confessed.
 ‘What have you done to look for work?’
 ‘Invoked the Mauve One in a pentagram…’
 ‘Get thee behind me. Here’s thy giro.’
It was that, or non-league football
 or deep green politics. I was joyously confused,
 my diary far too full for work.
 The saints were looking on and tutting,
 waiting for IDS and Universal Credit.
I spent my ill-gotten gains on off-peak travel
 and Nilgiri tea from shops packed high
 with sacks of rice in Ladypool Road.
 I’d haunt the Bull Ring market at closing time,
 coax aubergines and peppers into fiery curries.
All the time I concealed my bright red tail
 in scruffy jeans and no-one cared.
 The Pharisees were on the rise
 but had not yet triumphed. Food-banks
 were a thing of the past, not of the future.
Now, am I a pillar of the community
 with my twelve years’ faithful service
 and my plundered purse?
 Or a pillar of salt, caught looking back
 at a time of rebellion much too short?
Norman Jope
Pic: Mike Lesser

