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Guy Fawkes' Night

Guy Fawkes' Night By the middle of October the piles are growing. English weather fails to dampen childhood enterprise. Gangs traverse the streets in forage To drag, on broken prams, a hoard, A booty of wardrobes, cupboards, easy chairs. Mattresses and piles of junk - Now treasure - with which to build the towering fire, The tough kids claim the bomb site first for theirs, A blemish in the landscape of the street. Eight brothers of pernicious mien Snotty toddler to Borstal boy, Hob-nailed boots, no laces, florid knees, Of visage pale, straw haired and thin. Like robber barons, invincible, wild, They guarded it by day and night. We others, timid, watched from a distance. One day, their sentry absent, ventured inside their heap to see - a cave-like room: old sofa; sticky carpet; broken table; a cosy space, almost habitable, close refuge from domestic misery. One brother found solace with a five-pack of Woodbines. Smoked And slept. Their Bonfire was enormous that year. As funeral pyre beside the Ganges stream. Where smoke-bound spirits rise to astral planes. A shame it started early with no-one there to see - - or help. 11/01/20 Contest Eight Word Challenge Sponsor John Hamilton

Copyright © | Year Posted 2020




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Date: 10/19/2020 2:31:00 PM
bittersweet memories, shame it may not be the same this year...
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Cammish Avatar
Patricia Cammish
Date: 4/11/2021 12:04:00 PM
Thank you for your comment, sorry not to reply sooner

Book: Shattered Sighs