Western Leeds Poem by Paul Butters

Western Leeds



I was brought up in Western Leeds,
Almost two miles from the nearest cow or sheep.
In sprawling suburbs:
Row after row of smoke stained redbrick slums.
We had our fields:
Jungles of Rose Bay Willow Herb
(Fireweed to the Americans)
On former demolition sites.
Our childhood spears were honed
From fireweed spears.

Our house was in a terrace
On 'School Street',
Where we took baths in the sink
And crept to outside toilets
In the dark of the 'back yard'.

Those days were punctuated
By the 'Yie Yie' blare
From the local factory siren.
A deafening sound.
And by endless hammering
From the scrapyard nearby.

But we loved our dripping and bread,
And our walks to the sweet shop.
Playing hopscotch on those stone 'flags'
Along the sides of the cobbled street
Under old Victorian gas lamps
Straight from Narnia.

I recall crying on our return from the coast
At a dismal scene
Of soot shrouded trains
On tortured railway lines.

But I also feel nostalgia
For those heady days
Of childhood innocence.
Wearing a cardboard box as a space suit,
And running around
During a 'New Year's Revolution'.
Happy Days.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Topic(s) of this poem: home,industry,nostalgia,childhood
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This maybe explains a lot about me.
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Paul Butters

Paul Butters

Leeds, West Yorkshire.
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