HAUTE COUTURE*
insect parade
rank and row
his drybald impunence
monsieur precision-parts in person
one-time fore-room toolman
distraints no object
amid the encircling room
addressing fibrous grins
fiercely unguented mouths
pointing up the blow-through
blowing-up the minutinous
the analgesic psychopants
the frenetted fantasy-pads
the biunical conickers
the apple-pie boobs
the sang-freudian pseudoslips
the erectivity praecocks
the surrascible propulsities
minimating the maximammae
mamma-momming his well-preened darlings
their wombs all fitted with false teeth
their very chastities smelling of men
O loud applause!
bowing in reply
his glinting dome of sapience
his immockulate mojesty
but nosings at all mesdames
no sings at all
it is nosing
nosing
(1969)
___________________________
* This poem and the several others from FORMAT 7 were later included in FROM A LONDON SUBURB (Gogmagog Press, 1975). Colin Franklin described it as, �the most sad and disenchanted group of his poems.� He further writes:
I received it with a note at Christmas 1975, in which [Morris Cox] wrote, �Having purposefully, as it obscure the text!� (GOGMAGOG 152)
When he sent a copy of FROM A LONDON SUBURB to the South African collector Corrie Guyt, Cox commented: �Among the poems you will find the one titled �Haute Couture�. You had serious doubts about this and I had considered leaving it out. But it does help to fulfil the picture I am trying to paint, although, believe me, this is in no way a criticism of your work as such. It was written before I knew you. Even so, I admire your standards and your Mother�s very much, and I think you would agree with me that in all the arts there are people who tend to go too far in the wrong direction and spoil things for the serious workers.� (GOGMAGOG 83) While not explicit that Corrie Guyt was in the clothing business, as this letter suggests, he did supply Morris Cox with various cloth for use as binding material: �You will see that I have bound the book [FROM A LONDON SUBURB] in some of your Hong Kong silk, and the title-page has utilised one of your lace pieces!� (ibid.)