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It’s thirty years since I travelled back To wander my childhood home, To check out the trees I used to climb And the fields where I used to roam, I remembered the friends that used to play, Wendy and Paul and Mark, And the local bully that had his way Back then, in the Boating Park. We’d go up there on a Sunday, pay Our money and hire a boat, That fourpence each to the gatekeeper Saw the three of us afloat, Each boat had paddlewheels either side You could turn, and stop or start, Or spin around in a circle, just For fun, at the Boating Park. The Park, laid out in a rectangle Took an hour to paddle round, Once out of sight of the gatekeeper The banks would muffle the sound, We’d scream and shriek and laugh and beam As we rammed each other’s boats, I often thought it a wonder that We didn’t puncture the floats. Then over beyond the halfway mark We lay in the shade of trees, The sun would sink, it was getting dark And we’d hear the murmur of bees, We had to pass there under a bridge And duck, for the bridge was low, And that’s where the bully McPherson stood On the bridge, those years ago. He’d jeer, throw stones and catcall as we Tried to get under the span, Then climb and drop into Wendy’s boat He wouldn’t have tried with a man. He’d paddle over the further side And make her get out of the boat, Then paddle it back the way we came Get out, and leave it afloat. One Sunday I sat under the bridge With Paul and Mark beside, While Wendy came along on her own As if on a solo ride, The bully tried the very same thing But we each pulled on his coat, And when he came up, he couldn’t scream For the water lodged in his throat. He splashed about and he tried to grab The boat, but his clothes, like lead, Were trying to drag him down, while Paul And Mark, they stood on his head. Wendy had clambered up on the bank Controlled, and well in command, For every time he tried to get out, She’d stamp and stomp on his hand. The paper said it was very strange That he must have put up a fight, But hadn’t the strength to pull himself Up out of the cut that night. His hands and fingers were shredded, where He’d tried to climb up the bank, But the weight of his heavy, sodden clothes Were the demons he had to thank. I went to visit the Boating Park It was just the way I feared, I met up there with an older Mark, A man with a greying beard, He told me Wendy and Paul were dead Weighed down with a sense of sin, And the gatekeeper at the Boating Park Had gone, when they filled it in. David Lewis Paget
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Sep 30, 2013
Sep 30, 2013 at 5:05 AM UTC
The Boating Park
It’s thirty years since I travelled back To wander my childhood home, To check out the trees I used to climb And the fields where I used to roam, I remembered the friends that used to play, Wendy and Paul and Mark, And the local bully that had his way Back then, in the Boating Park. We’d go up there on a Sunday, pay Our money and hire a boat, That fourpence each to the gatekeeper Saw the three of us afloat, Each boat had paddlewheels either side You could turn, and stop or start, Or spin around in a circle, just For fun, at the Boating Park. The Park, laid out in a rectangle Took an hour to paddle round, Once out of sight of the gatekeeper The banks would muffle the sound, We’d scream and shriek and laugh and beam As we rammed each other’s boats, I often thought it a wonder that We didn’t puncture the floats. Then over beyond the halfway mark We lay in the shade of trees, The sun would sink, it was getting dark And we’d hear the murmur of bees, We had to pass there under a bridge And duck, for the bridge was low, And that’s where the bully McPherson stood On the bridge, those years ago. He’d jeer, throw stones and catcall as we Tried to get under the span, Then climb and drop into Wendy’s boat He wouldn’t have tried with a man. He’d paddle over the further side And make her get out of the boat, Then paddle it back the way we came Get out, and leave it afloat. One Sunday I sat under the bridge With Paul and Mark beside, While Wendy came along on her own As if on a solo ride, The bully tried the very same thing But we each pulled on his coat, And when he came up, he couldn’t scream For the water lodged in his throat. He splashed about and he tried to grab The boat, but his clothes, like lead, Were trying to drag him down, while Paul And Mark, they stood on his head. Wendy had clambered up on the bank Controlled, and well in command, For every time he tried to get out, She’d stamp and stomp on his hand. The paper said it was very strange That he must have put up a fight, But hadn’t the strength to pull himself Up out of the cut that night. His hands and fingers were shredded, where He’d tried to climb up the bank, But the weight of his heavy, sodden clothes Were the demons he had to thank. I went to visit the Boating Park It was just the way I feared, I met up there with an older Mark, A man with a greying beard, He told me Wendy and Paul were dead Weighed down with a sense of sin, And the gatekeeper at the Boating Park Had gone, when they filled it in. David Lewis Paget
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Sep 30, 2013
Sep 30, 2013 at 5:05 AM UTC
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