Spike Howarth, Writer

Street Poetry

Spike has sat on Portobello Road with a typewriter since early Summer 2024, writing off-the-cuff poetry in 10 minutes. Operating under the system: pick a topic, pay what you like, get a poem, Spike sought to test his skills and make poetry more accessible. Some people pay 50 pounds, others pay 50 pence, all poems are given equal effort and attention. 

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How did we get here?

I certainly was not the first to have the off-the-cuff idea, but I did not take the concept from Linklater’s flick Before Sunrise, as is frequently suspected. Instead, the motivation was born from an interaction with another street poet by the Southbank some years prior, the typewriter gifted to me by my Mum as an 18th birthday present, and many hours of practice; in my bed at night, on the tube, testing my speed of thought and words on friends, on randomers in nightclubs and pubs, prepping to make the move into the outside world.

Once I finally weathered the market with a wilting stool, hodgepodge sign, bottle of water, and falafel wrap, it all coalesced. I was practicing my craft while offering a unique product. People were reading my writing. I was making money doing something I loved, and that is more satisfaction than some ever have the privilege to experience. It went well for the first few months.  June turned to July, and July melted as August. Besides Mo, the grocer, just off the street coloured by a spectrum of houses, I was overwhelmingly grateful. Well, until a market steward stepped in.

I hadn’t had any problems with the council up to that point. They seemed fairly pleased with me there, or took interest, at least. But this particular steward felt that I should have a permit to sit and write poems. Some will read that and wonder what kind of freedom we have left; others will think he’s just doing his job. I would agree with the latter if there wasn’t an argument to be made that I am a busker. Many have grabbed their poems and walked off because no one is forcing you to pay, so what’s the difference between walking past me and walking past a guitarist?

He wasn’t buying that for a London second. I had to relocate, retreating to Westbourne Grove in front of the flower shop Wild at Heart. By this point, I was living between my brother’s sofa in Forest Gate and my girlfriend’s place in Holloway, making the commute any day I felt would be a busy one. I left the bits and bobs at my friend Lila’s flat, and came to collect them when needed. Yet, with each shift’s taking slowed by the unideal location, and travel time prolonged, I began to sense it wasn’t worth it.

Quicker than a mid-December day was that feeling tossed away. Mum didn’t raise no quitter. I moved around, testing different street corners while avoiding the steward on perpetual patrol. Eventually, I found my square metre in late spring ’25 outside the Earl of Lonsdale, or under the Notting Hill Bakery awning when it rains. Again, I was the means and ends of my production on Portobello—from head to hands to page to whoever passes by. No middleman, no catch.

Poetry can be seen as a snobby or posh form of art, a just critique given that some of its history is interconnected with classism. However, poetry is such a materially simple act—pen to page, mind to mouth. Anyone can try it.  It can help a child understand a concept, an adult process emotions, a sad person smile, a joyous one cry, and this beautiful form of expression should not be considered out of touch or reach. On the street, everyone is welcome; there are no barriers to entry, and it’s only natural that my poems work the same.

I know I don’t want to do this forever, but if I come to have enough success in my career, so that I may write from the comfort of my desk rather than the street, I’ll always owe it to Portobello Market for housing me, the endlessly welcoming vendours, the meanderers who stopped to read, the steward who reminded me why I even do it, my mates who gave me a sofa to crash on and their ears to listen, and my darling mother for buying me that typewriter those blurry years ago.

Street Poet

White knuckle grip my stool and chair

Gloves grew fingerless, what a privilege

Wear in the strands divorced

Orange’d letter arms, tawny in the wetter seconds

Two pairs of socks, pyjamas under trousers

Steel seat and my end cannot be discerned

Sewage stench depletes the moaning Autumn

And the lovely lady’s coffee cuddles me in Winter.

Would you like a sweat treat?

 

APES COME FROM APES
HUMANS COME FROM HUMANS

 

Pretty preacher in his balaclava

Stands upon the road blocker

Pensioner Jazz band draws a crowd

They face away from me.

Mustn’t count your money,

Mustn’t count your money.

Oh, no, I’m okay thanks.

 

JESUS STILL LOVES YOU

YOU ARE BLIND IF YOU SEEK HELL

 

Nameless asses peruse the dunes

Way past it busker play your repeated tunes

They give my ears something youthful to do.

Are you sure?

 

THEY WANT YOU TO FORGET HEAVEN
HUMANS COME FROM HUMANS

 

Crying before she even read it

Slim pickings, no tomatoes please

Cola from the offy, fluid to my left toe.

Not enough to sum

Sum the smiles, count ‘em, really

Bloody count their happiness

Quantify and glorify it.

Mustn’t check your wallet.

Mustn’t pocket watch.

I’ll take anything that isn’t selling

 

IT ISN’T TOO LATE

GIVE YOURSELF TO THE LORD TODAY

 

Today is just a Sunday, quite delicious

Gossipers gouge the scoop

Vendors forget their busyness

Traffic impatience, council staring contests

Some never do upkeep a promised return

Families as bunches, friendship groups

Want dedicated words for their

Boyfriends and the picture perfected

Without a year-to-date or snapshot earned.

A cookie would be yummy, actually.

 

THEY DON’T WANT US TO TALK ABOUT HEAVEN

APES COME FROM APES

 

What is it exactly that you do?

It isn’t clear, how does this work?

Tell me Amelia, Pia, Drew, or Mo

For I know little else

Tell me of your musing wants

Your baby’s name

Your father’s health

Never two lines replicated

Of that trip away when you first met

Without is now but lost regret

With all my wealthy worries here

Pocketed and dated.

We’re sorry that it’s stale from sitting out

 

HUMANS COME FROM HUMANS

IT ISN’T COMPLICATED