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MY CHANGING TOWN
Where are the little
girls, dancing and skipping,
And
those enamel bowls of pork fat dripping
In the new part of
town?
Where run the dogs with
saliva-moist bones
Over
rain-washed, dark grey cobble stones
In the new part of
town?
Where are the
sparrows, chilled to their marrows
Through
the streets broad and narrow
Of the new part of
town?
Where
are shop windows with little square panes?
Where
are the curved and leafy lanes
In the new part of town?
Where are the rowdy,
crowdy, and bawdy
Old drunks, spilling
out of tap rooms tawdry
In the new part of
town?
Where is the
moustached old man with his cry of 'Papers'
The finger-soiled
bundles of candles and tapers
In the new part of
town?
Where wafts the smell
of frizzling fish frying,
The tossing and
blowing of soap-washed shirts drying
In
the new part of town?
What happened to Nell
with her long skirts and laces?
It isn't the same.
You don't see the same faces
In the new part of
town.
One day came the
monster machine and it spewed at our feet
The masses of
concrete and glass by the sheet.
It made the new part
of town.
And with plenty of
time and infinite trouble
It squawked and it
screeched and it built on the rubble
The new part of town.
And under the site of
the new 'Super-Mart'
Like the days long
gone by, is buried, my heart
In the new part of
town.
Margaret Watford
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