Author: Paul Curran

  • Poetry Recording – Paul Curran

    Try mph

    To Payney, Tinpan, JJ, Tom P., Tom C., Col, Ry, Peewee

    I know the car I would most love to own:

    Well red, early seventies TR6,

    That beautiful, British-built, roadster mix,

    Boldly bearing the boxed badge of renown –

    Great jewel in Triumph’s commercial crown –

    Two point five litre, manual, straight-six,

    Mint restored, flying new like a phoenix,

    To be roared, roof down, roared round my home town.

    Not for the dropping into overdrive –

    Instrumentation alive on the dash –

    Nor for near-by-gone auto heritage.

    More for the pace and the raw expressive

    Chase and catching of oneself off guard – Flash! –

    Much unfussed by life’s high, rising mileage.

    Paul Curran was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1975. He holds a degree in English Language and Literature from the University of Oxford and a Masters Degree from the Royal Central School of Speech & Drama. He has worked widely as a professional actor. His Only Sonnet loosely follows the pattern of the seasons, comprised of 100+ ‘alternative’ sonnets; Repeat Fees and its 80 sonnets and longer poems was published in July 2017.

  • B Road Blues

    Born by the river, out in the sticks

    I was born on a bend on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Making old friends, Rubicon tricks

    Much still to fix on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Romans rode here, hear the hoof clicks

    Some see their ghosts on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Journey’s the same, the dead and the quick’s

    Cutting through the mist on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Executor, executrix

    Fresh eggs for sale on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Love lasts forever, young love pricks

    Some are still searching on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Stone and timber, timber and bricks

    Much to remember on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Stacks with plenty, plenty with nix

    Weather unrelenting on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Players pretend with frantic theatrics

    Not just teenage kicks on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    They fought before with axes and picks

    Fought a Civil War on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    The pain they pray is the lame and the sick’s

    May one day fade away on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Some are flame throwers, swear like Bill Hicks

    Others grow church flowers on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Hat-tricks won, missed penalty kicks

    Dislocating hips on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Life ain’t a sweetshop just selling Twix

    It’s a big ol’ pic’n’mix on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Simon called Peter, Richard’s nicked Dick’s

    Some names are made on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Magicians vape smoke with their cash and card tricks

    Magic’s still a secret on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Some write with quills, sharper than Bics

    Slanty-id italics on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    A thief may never know from whom he nicks

    Flash cars flashing past on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Ringing guitars’ lickety licks

    Bending like Hendrix on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Choose party sex over party politics

    Horny Burke’s dilemma on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Peace wind blowing Vulcan aeronautics

    Once heroed Hurricanes on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Hellfire statistics, bullet ballistics

    But now bombs won’t win wars on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Some speak the truth, some speak synthetics

    Some don’t speak at all on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Birds and beasts, lambs and chicks

    Nature’s an engraver on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    No slow runners, torched Olympics

    Silver, bronze, gold on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Carabosse dusk dirt-track dominatrix

    Allsortsa country matters on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Peacock feathers flair in fancy flicks

    Pride falls like darkness on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Ain’t surprised the dead get more crosses than ticks

    Many miles of road on the Forty Eighty-six

     

    Paul Curran was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1975. He holds a degree in English Language and Literature from the University of Oxford and a Masters Degree from the Royal Central School of Speech & Drama. He has worked widely as a professional actor. His Only Sonnet loosely follows the pattern of the seasons, comprised of 100+ ‘alternative’ sonnets; Repeat Fees and its 80 sonnets and longer poems was published in July 2017.