Thinking back yet again to my childhood And the shoelace I couldn’t quite fasten To the many ways Mum used to help me With those little skills parents pass on. Six children to love and she really did She would though, she was our Mum As well as soothing our often cut knees She cooked all the food for our tum. She’d **** our socks and wash our clothes And iron things we don’t iron now Then all of it would just disappear into drawers As if done by magic somehow. But Mum didn’t have it anyway easy Dad died at just fifty-two And Mum struggled on and raised us alone But at night-time she cried, we all knew. As the new day began there would be not a sign Of the heartache her nights brought to her She got on with the task of raising her brood To her feelings she’d rarely refer. Dad had grown vegetables to feed us He grew dahlias for my mother, his love They’ve both been long gone now from this place Now they stroll hand in hand up above.