George Formby
A True Star Of The Uke

George Formby‘s Tune
Didn’t need a book to teach him
words found him, cheek first
in smoke halls and sticky floors
where the punchlines rolled
as easy as the banjo twanged
Grin like a pint raised mid-laugh
never too proud to cock a wink
never too clean to sweep the edge
of a saucy verse or a backstreet heart
Wigan born — aye, and built for the boards
the kind of man you’d nudge in the ribs
not just for a joke, but because he was yours
a bit daft, dead clever,
salted with the same rain
The BBC turned its nose up
called him rude,
but the people clapped louder
they knew his songs smelled of chimney soot
and chip shop grease
of snogging behind sheds,
not marbled halls and hush
They banned his window-cleaning ditty
like windows didn’t need a wipe
like we don’t all peek
where we shouldn’t sometimes
Frank Skinner traced the grin years later
stood in the quiet of his stone
but George?
George was never quiet
He’s in Warrington’s rain
in the tap of a foot at the market
in statues that look ready to burst into song
at a lad tuning up,
cheeky as ever
And he never needed diamonds
just strings,
a stage,
and someone laughing back

About the Creator
Marie381Uk
I've been writing poetry since the age of fourteen. With pen in hand, I wander through realms unseen. The pen holds power; ink reveals hidden thoughts. A poet may speak truth or weave a tale. You decide. Let pen and ink capture your mind❤️



Comments (1)
Street minstrels should be praised for all they are doing is letting the common people enjoy. Good work.