Day 23 ~ Voices from a Village School

Voices from the Village

~

i.

A little history before we begin.

Let me take you in to Husbands Bosworth,

by a deep and ancient path.

A settlement in the Domesday Book,

in the Hundred of Gartree,

County of Leicestershire.

There were boar and deer in the woods back then.

Lord in 1066: Aelric son of Mergeat.

In 1086, landowners Guy of Raimbeaucourt,

and old Gilbert of Ghent

now to hell or heaven are sent.

All the plough teams are listed,

villagers, freemen, small holders, surfs,

meadows, mills and livestock

are all there in the book.

Let’s have a closer look at my own times.

~

ii.

Some of the families remained.

The manor house still stood,

surrounded by ancient cedars,

close to Sandy Lane

and the church with the gothic spire

that replaced its Saxon sire.

In Spring we had a fete.

The kissing gate was down Dag Lane

on the way to the railway crossing

and strange Ruby’s cottage.

~

iii.

He lived in Honeypot Lane.

In the 1950’s

they watched TV next door

until they got their own.

Things were different then.

We had good neighbours

and everyone mucked in.

I’d go back to that again

without a qualm.

~

iv.

Life was charmed.

We did country dancing in the school yard,

and nature walks

and picnics down Gravel Hole.

Good times were had by all.

The village had a soul.

I think there is some old cine film

of the sword dancing team.

I have boxes of photos in the loft.

I’m going to have a hunt.


~

v.

Uncouth youth,

lolling about and bragging

on the corner on Friday night.

Winkle pickers, hair slicked into a quiff,

duck’s arse at the back.

Sticky with Vaseline.

Lazy lout, hanging about.

Always the last to leave the pub.

Propping the bar, gossiping, boasting, blabbing.

Thinks he’s the king of the village.

Bully boy.

Every decade has one.

~

vi.

I remember the nature walks

up to the gravel pit spinney.

I stumbled on the track

down Tom Smith’s field

and cut my knee.

You remember the way?

I plastered it with burdock.

I still have a scar to this day.

~

vii.

Remember that winter it snowed and snowed?

We had drifts above our knees.

The canal froze over.

Icicles hung in the trees for months.

Horse breath plumed warm and soft as I passed an apple.

~

viii.

I tracked the hares and foxes.

There were footprints everywhere.

That was the year of the Ice Queen.

Fairies and frost.

So clean.

~

ix.

Lizzie with the pig tails

was my best friend back then.

I was nine and she was ten.

I still miss the village,

the fields and Windmill Hill,

the horses in the meadows

and our secret den.

In summer we played all day

and went home with the sinking sun. 

© A.Chakir 2023

River

falling from a mountain spring
pouring down the waterfalls
rushing over rock
drumming through the hollows
babbling to the sheep
flowing through the valley
reflecting summer skies
chasing the kingfisher
toward the evening light
hiding here and there
vanished underground
passing through the city
collecting plastic bags
running in the dark
racing through the sluice gates
seeping through the cracks
leaping down the weir
escaping through the park
loitering with ducks
lapped against the bridges
dipped with fishing rods
passing through the village
dithering with frogs
winding through the meadows
dallying with swans
gliding under willows
seeking quiet shade
stroking the salmon
lazed in sunlit pools
growing ever wider
entering the estuary
taken by the tide
i see the river rise
rise and rise again
sustaining every life
lifted by the sun
it reaches to the sky
flies above the mountains
flooding back in rain
pouring down the waterfalls
rushing over rock

 

A Welsh Voice

 

The mists, the mountains, cloud topped giants,
houses hung beneath the roads,
the mysteries of Cader Idris,
the bearded lake, Arthur’s stone,
a throne beside the glassy water
hollowed rock o’er grown with moss,
the leap of silvered salmon in the river,
the sheep, the lanes, the wayside markers
in the wall of wild flowers blooming,
by granite seat of ancient Bards,
where people gathered
hearing story roll from lips and memory.
All these things we saw together,
wandering in the wilderness of Wales
with my father, as a child.

The village streets where women gossiped,
the cobblestones and chimney pots
enchanted drifts of wood-smoked air
the clanging chime of book shop bell
as my father lead me to a gloomy room
walled with shelves.
Reaching up above my head
he handed me Dylan Thomas
a poet he had never read.

In bed that night a door swung open
with all the chimes of stream and meadow
louder than the bookshop bell
ringing out in word and image
words delicious in my mouth
the sounds, the shapes, the sensual pleasures
wrapped in beauty, thoughts profound,
laughter, love, the lowing cattle
driven home at eventide.
The orchards and the apple trees,
the night above that shines with stars.
The chapel choirs sang out across the valleys
voices raised in harmony and hymn,
the moaning echoes of the wind in grass
the sighing singing of the sea,
short lives lived
parading slowly to the grave.