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Posts Tagged ‘Royal Victoria Hospital’


A day like any other –

In the middle of a war.

Except it isn’t.

Anticipation is high as 

Mabel and Gertie Bowbrick,

And devoted mother, Nellie,

Wait patiently in line

Outside Stokes greengrocers

On teeming Tontine Street,

For a special delivery

Of scarce fruit and vegetables

Later that afternoon.

At twenty minutes past six,

With darkening clouds 

Concealing surprise,

What sounds like gunfire 

Is heard from the direction of 

Shorncliffe Army Camp.

“It’s just training manoeuvres, 

It happens all the time”,

The general consensus

Among an unconcerned crowd,

Comforted that Blighty 

Remains up for the fight.

Until two minutes later

When the lengthening queue

Is obliterated by single bomb, 

Casually hurled from 

A passing Gotha plane.

Frederick and Arthur Stokes,

And their family

Perish on the spot,

Along with Mabel and Gertie 

And many of their neighbours.

Sixty one slain in total, 

The youngest three months old, 

Thirty six more lives snuffed out

Before the final toll is known

Nearly eight years later,

When valiant, much loved Nellie

Draws her last breath in the 

Royal Victoria Hospital,

Half a mile from the scene.

No rationing of potatoes as planned,

But rather a rationing of civilian lives,

Lost in a line of innocence and hope.

Today, flanked by brewery tap

And greasy spoon,

A small, pale blue plaque,

Sometimes adorned 

With a spray of flowers,

Stands by a bare, open patch,

Where tenacious weeds 

Thrust through shards of slate.

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With resident white mallard
On a seasonal sabbatical,
A newly arrived black cormorant
Struts and preens on the central island
Of Radnor Park’s fishing lake,
While ravenous pigeons wrestle
Over scarce, illicit bread stocks.

No more anglers cast silent floats
On the teeming duck infested waters;
No rods and bait filled baskets
Bestrew the narrow concrete path,
Forcing me to trudge through
The muddied grassy verge
As a pair of greedy gulls stamp
Feet to tantalise tender worms.

A limpid sun shines apologetically
Above the mock Tudor tea rooms;
Nurses from near minor injury unit
Snatch fag breaks on the corner
Where discarded dog ends,
And twigs from overhanging trees,
Entice the ducks into mistaking
Them for a flavoursome breakfast,
(The fags and twigs, not the nurses).

After a day when few people pass
To witness the birdlife bedlam,
Dusk descends on a noiseless scene,
And a serene moon declines
Over Cheriton Road rooftops;
And in the littered concrete shelter,
Where youths habitually congregate
To drink and smoke and lark about,
There is neither light nor sound,
No need here for an enforced curfew.

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