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Kingston




We walked along the old roads of Anglo-Saxon Kings

We walked by the river and saw the silent white swans

The fashionable people fill

The fashionable restaurants

The pigeons congregate for scraps


Not together, but not apart.

You and I trod in the path

Of Ancient England. 

We trod where a gold Queen looks out across

The marketplace.

We trod the staircase

Blackened with age

Built when Shakespeare’s daughter was alive


Here, amid the bustle

I watched you but

Let you walk

And turn into the applemarket


Did we watch the slime on

The dank river bricks 

Slither down towards the water?

Did we wonder at the age of the 

Bridge and who made it?

Could we hear the hooves clattern

Upon the wooden structure

And anneal the wheelwrights work?

Were all the words too distant to today?


Maybe the ancient story

Of a friendship began to move

Unrecognised across the sky

Perhaps you learned the pontifex

You would become

Peering into the Hogsmill’s silt

Where is the end, where the beginning?


Where the salmon leap

Where the stags do battle

Where seven kings were crowned


Here, where I toiled along in my mothers’ hand

Not protesting but wearied beyond belief

By her constant interruption of her own progress

Wanting to look at this or that vestment.


An endless journey on a broiling trolley bus –

Airless and ceaseless

Arriving home dirty enough to have

A bath and be amazed

At the blackness of my own feet.

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