A Village, Old Families: Inn
 
In memory of Pete Moore
 
 
The village pub, a homely inn, 
the place where people, gathering, 
discuss and solve the day's concerns. 
A simple bar, where shadow burns 
the teasing fire on faces so 
well known, the place of public flow.
 
A stranger's eyes, as rare as lock 
in use, yet once the minute's shock 
has passed, a welcome's warmth is roared 
for chance of news, or tales the Lord 
would frown upon, or better still, 
fresh music played with humble skill.
 
And once the common welcome's done 
and almost everyone has gone 
to where their drink and chat were left, 
the stranger won't be made bereft 
of company, for one or two 
will stay behind, to talk about
 
the stranger's life, or local tales 
of tradegy in winter gales, 
or rumours from the capital: 
which minister "is full of bull, 
which Lady's caught herself a man, 
which industry's gone down the pan".
 
Some strangers, though, are not as strange 
as most suppose. For these, the change 
they'd undergone since childhood days, 
the hardship, grief, and lines of age, 
it made their welcome bittersweet, 
denying friends in deep deceit
 
for though they'd felt the need to leave 
as adolescents do, they'd grieved 
for memories of children times,  
of playful pranks, of childhood crimes, 
of happiness so long ago 
with those they now deny they know.
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97-99
  
arts & ego dish dosh 
© & licence
   
  
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Introduction 
Ceremony 
Inn 
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