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Elegy for Lonnie Donegan (Free verse) by Nicholas Jones
"My old man's a dustman
He wears a dustman's hat
He wears cor blimey trousers
And he lives in a council flat"
I read the news
That he is dead
Of course, on ceefax
And, naturally
Thought first of
My own father
And then
Of his tales of the 1950s
When all was right in the world
And there was common decency.
"Oi! Where's me tiger's 'ead?
Three feet from its tail!"
I remember long car journeys
Where my father imposed on us
His love of skiffle
Despite our protests
But I cannot imagine him
Listening to Lonnie
In 1956
When a bloke from Glasgow
With his mate abusing a washboard
Playing a banjo
Affecting an accent
From the Mississippi delta
Sounded like the future
"Cumberland Gap
Ain't nowhere"
And now the lyrics
Enter my head
And won't go
"We had a little bacon
And we had a little beans"
Nobody had invented youth culture
So Lonnie had to do it
"Down the Mississippi
To the Gulf of Mexico"
The time is right
For a skiffle revival
Is it fanciful to think
Jack White might have
A few of his records
At home in Detroit?
"And we fought the bloomin' British
In the town of New Orleans"
He changed the world by accident
Bringing America
Into British lives
He borrowed form Leadbelly
And committed terrible jokes
To long-playing records
"If tin whistles are made of tin
What are foghorns made of?"
Now my mind is full
Of this alien music
Recalled from childhood
"How d'you know it's full?
'Cause there's not room inside..."
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