I can see my childhood amongst the fenced bomb shelters no longer there. And the Goats’ Field still lies empty. The River Shuttle’s gentle banks are gone now, replaced by cement walls. So Billy can’t scramble , won’t wade and ford. Cheryl won’t swing and Jenny won’t scream her thrill of horror. Steve’s feet will stay disappointedly dry – much to his mum’s delight.
The meander remains, the trees still bow to the much-reduced majesty of the Shuttle, but we can’t join the dance from the walled edge – we can only drink in the river’s weak echo.
- Willersley - Marlborough - Lamborbey - Halfway Street - Ye Olde Black Horse
The snooker hall, full of ‘don’t tell your mother’ chatter and I can’t reach that blue spot even at a stretch.
The Glade stretches and hops down to re-join the Shuttle - River Cray - Foots Cray Meadows - River Darent - Darent Valley
to hospital wards full of discarded mothers, falling back into the river and drifting to the Dartford Creek barrier, erected by the well-meaning against the anticipation of that Boxing Day tidal wave
- a calculated sacrifice of our pasts for a hoped-for last laugh.
A reflection on childhood days in Blackfen, Sidcup, Kent, UK.