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Today, on November 23rd, 2009, the site contains 196 poets, 8,692 poems and 7,660 comments.
John Betjeman - Inexpensive Progress

Encase your legs in nylons,
Bestride your hills with pylons
O age without a soul;
Away with gentle willows
And all the elmy billows
That through your valleys roll.

Let's say goodbye to hedges
And roads with grassy edges
And winding country lanes;
Let all things travel faster
Where motor car is master
Till only Speed remains.

Destroy the ancient inn-signs
But strew the roads with tin signs
'Keep Left,' 'M4,' 'Keep Out!'
Command, instruction, warning,
Repetitive adorning
The rockeried roundabout;

For every raw obscenity
Must have its small 'amenity,'
Its patch of shaven green,
And hoardings look a wonder
In banks of floribunda
With floodlights in between.

Leave no old village standing
Which could provide a landing
For aeroplanes to roar,
But spare such cheap defacements
As huts with shattered casements
Unlived-in since the war.

Let no provincial High Street
Which might be your or my street
Look as it used to do,
But let the chain stores place here
Their miles of black glass facia
And traffic thunder through.

And if there is some scenery,
Some unpretentious greenery,
Surviving anywhere,
It does not need protecting
For soon we'll be erecting
A Power Station there.

When all our roads are lighted
By concrete monsters sited
Like gallows overhead,
Bathed in the yellow vomit
Each monster belches from it,
We'll know that we are dead.

Credit: Reprinted with the permission of John Murray (Publishers) Ltd

Added: on August 30th, 2005 at 12:04 PM | Viewed: 2645 times | Comments (2)


Inexpensive Progress - Comments and Information

Poet: John Betjeman
Poem: Inexpensive Progress

Poem of the Day on:
Jul 13 2009

Comment 2 of 2, added on March 21st, 2006 at 3:59 PM.

Not only a gentleman in the old fashioned sense of the word but a visionary who took the early lead in Green issues long before it was hijacked by
hordes of Toby and Amanda's that now fill our news with their twittering's learned by rote from their University courses. If their was ever a case for sainthood surely John would be at the head of the column. I rather admire his shambling English approach to events that peeve him, he writes a poem in this case that satirises the whole mess that we call civilisation now. Oh dear John Elysium is lost for ever, replaced by this awful American ersatz blob. However your words will ring through the ages as proof that there was civilisation once. We salute you


Paul Wiseman from Australia
Comment 1 of 2, added on August 30th, 2005 at 12:04 PM.

A beautiful poem which questions the destrucive modernising which was occuring and still is. I fell in love with this poem when I first heard it, both because of the message which it conveys which, but also the aggressive manner used to drill it's message home.

Michael from United Kingdom

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