Skip to main content
Morning Star Conference
Some Arabs Are Blue-Eyed

The Street Arabs are camping out in Bognor
Rolling out their cardboard carpets on the pavements
Of the pedestrianised street, grime-singed white rags
Wrapped round their heads like makeshift keffiyeh
To keep them cool, damp out the pounding sun;
Some improvise tents out of deconstructed boxes,
Sleeping bags for back-props like camel saddles
With canvas pads as makeshift chairs, or head-props;
Some bear complexions of burnt orange, others
Of leathery brown, they don’t want to get too
Tanned in case they rub the Bognor ‘Gammon’
Up the wrong way, whose umbrages are terrible,
Who labour under make-believe that ‘Brexit’ has banished
All immigrants, refugees, and beggarly Arabs;
Not Ali Baba but Al the Barber and his red-and-white-
Striped pole signposting he’s open for business once
The klaxon announces Close Sesame on incomers,
And Britain’s cast itself adrift and ‘taken back control’,
At least then the Street Arabs will all be Caucasians,
Many with eyes deep blue as their black passports –
Black or blue, it’s disputable, a moot point open to
Perceptions – but we digress as we regress, let us stress:
Henceforth it'll be British streets for British homeless…

Alan Morrison lives in Bognor Regis and his most recent poetry collection is Gum Arabic. 21st-century Poetry is edited by Andy Croft, email info@smokestack-books.co.uk

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
boix
Books / 4 June 2025
4 June 2025

ALAN MORRISON reflects on the subtle achievement of a rare exercise in a loose sonnet form

(L to R) Niall McDevitt by William Blake’s headstone in Bu
OBITUARY / 9 October 2022
9 October 2022
February 22 1967 - September 29 2022
Similar stories
Displaced Palestinians return to their homes in the northern
21st Century Poetry / 29 January 2025
29 January 2025
By Michael Rosen
21st Century Poetry / 8 January 2025
8 January 2025
by Andy Jackson
THE STATE v THE PEOPLE: (left-right) Dr Larch Maxey, Extinct
Poetry review / 23 October 2024
23 October 2024
PAUL LAUGHLIN welcomes a collection whose central issues embrace class, unemployment and the benefits system 
21st Century Poetry / 17 June 2024
17 June 2024
by Jemima Foxtrot