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Posts Tagged ‘World War 1’


The slope lies bleak and empty

But for beer cans and used condoms

Tossed from the churchyard path above,

No sound of boots in rhythm pounding

Down the road to likely death,

No echoes of Pack Up Your Troubles or

It’s a Long way to Tipperary


To compete with shrieking seagull,

Duffy’s “quiet road” lives up to its name.

Crippling, cracked, steep steps

Still wind down to the promenade,

Past nettles, brambles and bushes

And brazen corner ketamine deals;

On twisted railings and fences

Once proud scarlet poppies

Are now tattered and greying

Like the graves of those who

Never got to climb the road again.

The restoration of Dickens’ joyful view

From Albion Villas is scant consolation

For this scene of desolation;

Thirty months closed now,

The promise of money is there

And that work will commence soon,

But there are as many labourers here today

As there are soldiers marching to their fate.  

I stand here waiting for the next landslip

To forestall those plans for renovation.

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This is where east meets west,
Dover Road and Augusta Gardens;
Where DFLs mix with Folky born and breds,
Cold war adjourned for one warm afternoon.

Tram Road traffic crawls and curls
Around a heaving Harbour Street,
Affording passengers an extended view
Of much loved, yet loathed, Grand Burstin.

A brisk breeze, cooling the searing sun,
Sweeps champagne flutes to a watery end
In the chastening Channel spray
That laps the lighthouse;
Proof that, sometimes, weather
Can be a first to place and time.

Sinatra’s call to Come Fly with Me
Gives way to the eclectic sounds
That entertain the growing queues
For Sole Kitchen and Hog and Hop.
While the Native Oyster Band
Has the crowds singing and swaying,
Kadialy Kouyate’s kora mesmerises,
Bringing the authentic sounds of
New Orleans and Senegal to
This English coastal paradise.

Children build bricks to knock them down,
Dash between Baba Ji and Pick Up Pintxos
Or search for the iron man in the water,
(Don’t worry, kids, he will be back!).


But if the heat and tumult are too much
And it is peace you pine for,
Retire inside to the Mole Cafe
For a mug of strong, hot tea
And a chocolate swiss roll,
Reminders of a quieter,
Yet more violent, time.

Tomorrow, normal service will be resumed;
DFLs will become RTLs
(Work it out!);
The Arm will be handed back
To anglers, cormorants and
A few unsuspecting souls,
Drenched by crashing waves
Cascading over the Folkestone sign.

But is this the lull before the storm?
Eden before the Fall?
Will those blissful views across
To ancient East Cliff and to Sunny Sands
Be there to inspire us still
In three, or five, or ten, years?

Or will the thunder of pick and drill
Drown out those of bass and drum?

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