Park Bench Tales and other writings

Thoughts and writings reflecting the poet within and the activist

Hamlet

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Hamlet (settlement smaller than a village)

A battered leather satchel hung from his shoulder

As the boy stepped down from the school bus

Still a mile to walk along steep rutted lanes

Before he reached his world that was home

There were homes here

About ten or twelve

Old stone cottages had seen better days

Some deserted and crumbling away

The name had intrigued him

A Welsh name that referenced an anvil

The back of an anvil

Had there been a blacksmith there

Shoeing horses for the farms

Perhaps a reference to the shape of a hill

A piece of history

Mystery

Now buried in its past

Quarrymen had laboured nearby

Blasting the shale out of the hill

To be hauled away for grit

That covered these narrow roads

Swilled pints at the end of their shift

Smoked Woodbines from the store

Farm labourers had trudged between farms

Lifting turnips from freezing ground

During the harsh winters

Stacking sheaves in the Autumn

Cleaned themselves off in a tin tub

Before seeking sleep in a metal frame bed

Len lived in one

Sweet tea and cheese sandwiches his lunch

The ladies had offered him work

When others had turned him away

Labelled as dim dumb and slow

By others too ignorant to know

Across the road was a young lady

Coping with stress

Escaping from the past

Where her mind sought to explode

Hoping to find peace in this place

The smell of fresh paint

As she sought to care

The door to one was left open

Where old Tom had died in his chair

Watching a television

With nothing left to do after he retired

The couple who cared for the chapel next door

Had found him that way

The foreman’s cottage by the quarry

Where a sweeper of roads now lived

An old bicycle was propped against the wall

Blue paint was flaking from a door

The damp making its way through window frames

A landlord

Who cared only about the rent

The boy knew the quarry face

He had once climbed the slippery stone

Escaping from a local farm bully

Knowing the coward

Dare not follow that route

The chapel plain slate and stone

Primitive Methodist whitewashed walls

A pulpit and a few wooden benches

A harmonium that squeaked with the pump

The faithful five attended each Sunday

I was one who later

Preached to a faithful four

How long could this way of life last

Before it too became a part of the past

Copyright: David Hopcroft April 2024

(Footnote: 2024 An old tumbledown cottage I described here was sold for $350,000)

Author: davidjhopcroft

Former learning centre manager at a state college in Florida now living in England and enjoying the wonderful scenery close to the Pennines and the Lake District

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