Rationed by Ross Thompson, written in Bangor during 2020 Lockdown.
And before we knew,
we were waiting in queues
for entry into stores of depleting
groceries: home baking aisles picked
entirely clean, shelves of tinned goods already
resource stripped by a plague of frenzied
locusts with an all-you-can-eat philosophy
and no intent to save the wheat or make do
and mend. Who could comprehend the urge
to fill the barn at the expense of those
in need; to pillage the whole village, to scoop
it all and deprive the pained of paracetamol?
But we all did it. We each succumbed
to the deep-seated fear of running the gauntlet
at the supermarket, two trolleys apart, circling one way
on the hunt for vitamin C and anti-bac spray,
all the while venting first world problems: the lack
of lasagne sheets and Panko breadcrumbs, panic
buying penne and basmati riceā¦ what became of us?
How did we grow so out of touch? Glutting on foodstuffs,
all the while fretting, it will never be enough,
it will never be enough.