Celebrating National Poetry Day with a riposte to Rudyard Kipling from North Manchester’s unofficial laureate Mike Duff

It’s National Poetry Day so why not let’s celebrate with north Manchester’s unofficial laureate? 

It says a lot about the cultural divide in this city that there will be many in the centre and the south side who’ve never heard of Duff. Others would have it differently. He came to prominence with the extraordinary novel Low Life in 2000, perhaps one of the finest ever to be written about the city, and was the winner of the BBC’s Poem For Manchester competition in 2004 (you’ll find the winning verse inscribed on the Curve Bridge at Piccadilly Place). 

On The Road To Harpurhey can be found in his collection, Of A Mancunian, and the poet will tell you that it’s an homage and not a takedown.

“He’s remembered as this colonialist,” says Duff, “but he related to the ordinary soldier. He laments the girl he’s left behind and the life he’s left behind”. I’m a big fan. Danny Moran

2018 10 05 Mike Duff
North Manchester’s unofficial laureate Mike Duff

On The Road To Harpurhey

by Mike Duff


sat by bernard manning’s club looking drunk down rochdale road

a collyhurst girl is waitin for me or so i have bin told

for the graffiti in the bus shelters an the drunks they seem to say

come you back with your giro, come you back to harpurhey

on the road to harpurhey

where the happy slappers play

an you can watch your life go down the pan, an you don’t get a say

 

her hair it was a dirty blonde an her eyes they shined so green

an she chained smoked super kings without a gap between

an she pushed a pram to netto, two kids that looked like me

but it was giro time again an i had some other place to be

on the road to harpurhey

where the happy slappers play

an you can watch your life go down the pan, an you don’t get a say

 

so take me somewhere east of moston to a street that nobody knows

an i’ll live there with my heartache amongst kids with their asbos

but when the moon is high over Beswick an i hear a lone dog bark

i’ll remember the first time i kissed her an held her in the dark

on the road to harpurhey

where the happy slappers play

an you can watch your life go down the pan, an you don’t get a say 

 

Photos: Danny Moran

Enjoyed that? Why not check out the others in our occasional Poetry Corner series: Bricks and A Gift.

Fancy submitting something to poetry corner? Then please email editorial1@confidentials.com.