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#widnes
A few miles inland, Told to lock all windows and doors, There is Chlorine in the air, As England remembers Soviet Russia, Chemical spills tickling the throat of the century, Stinging the eyes of the children Bored in the beer garden of Britain, The roads are all blocked and the whiskey is watered down. People leave slower than ever, Swimming in pools of exhaust fumes, CO2, Radio 2, M52 bound, Vehicular nightmare wound, Lost in the A-Z of our Father’s arteries Reversing through his varicose veins, Stopping short of starry futures, Air pollution spoiling meteor showers. An end, an end, Over and Over again.
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Jul 7, 2016
Jul 7, 2016 at 10:30 AM UTC
Notes on a Widnesian chemical spill
There's a drawing on my wall a pen and ink impression of the old transporter bridge - a Meccano masterpiece. It's my Tardis, my time machine, portal to a vast interior of vivid early images, sounds of a rumbling grumbling bogie pulling me back through time. The clatter as our boarding gate swings shut, an alert pause in the varnished cabin. We listen for the next familiar step, the creaking **** towards Runcorn Gap, passing over Aethelfleda's Castle, the mid-crossing windblown waltzing, the bustling landing in the other county.
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Jun 27, 2015
Jun 27, 2015 at 6:39 AM UTC
Runcorn Transporter Bridge: Crossing the Gap
Widnes aint much, but to me she’s sweet home, Safe refuge from wherever I roam, Many may claim that she’s ugly and ****** But open your eyes, and she’s really quite pretty. From down by the snig, to up to the Crown, There’s pubs a plenty where sorrows can drown, The Globe, The Coterie, now Pesto of course, But to all us old locals, it’s still the Black Horse. Town centre drunks, laugh while they rant, Old ICI and their Paraquat plant, An industrial past, its dirt and its grime, A ***** old river, her sludge and her slime. Of nature reserves, we have quite a few, From out of our wastelands, something wonderful grew, Wildlife thriving where once we dumped ******* Now even the Mersey lives once more with fish. The factory smells that insulted our noses, Spike Island, proud host once to the Stone Roses, Paul Simon himself, when loneliness found, On one of our stations,  wrote Homeward Bound. The Beatles once played our dear Queens Hall, Derelict now, no more curtains to call, We love our music live and loud, We truly are a passionate crowd. A sporty town, but leagues our game, Tho’ recent years have been quite a shame, Myler, Karalius, Davies, Offiah, Crowned World champs, our status climbed higher. Proud we cheered in old Naughton Park, The cowsheds, cold, smelly and dark, The glory days, they came and went, Old fans speak in sad lament. The whole town’s roads, my how they’ve changed, Drivers sit there now, all deranged, Confusing sets of roundabouts, That lead us there, or thereabouts. Morrisons, Aldi and now a Tesco, Asda Halebank, well that had to go, A curious accent, not manc or scouse, Just hear us speak with Woolyback nouse. W’s in words, like one, two, three, foewer, And entering homes, through a front doewer, It’s hard to explain in a few lines here, But a few minutes in town, and all becomes clear. Bowling, cinema and now an ice rink, The town is recovering, back from the brink, There’s Costa, Next, Boots and Wilkos, Who else is coming, no one quite knows. Widnes has changed in my 40 years, But filled with hopes now instead of fears, Change for the better? Let’s wait and see, But no matter what, she’s still home to me. © Cinco Espiritus Creation 2012
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May 21, 2016
May 21, 2016 at 7:41 AM UTC
Widnes
Widnes aint much, but to me she’s sweet home, Safe refuge from wherever I roam, Many may claim that she’s ugly and ****** But open your eyes, and she’s really quite pretty. From down by the snig, to up to the Crown, There’s pubs a plenty where sorrows can drown, The Globe, The Coterie, now Pesto of course, But to all us old locals, it’s still the Black Horse. Town centre drunks, laugh while they rant, Old ICI and their Paraquat plant, An industrial past, its dirt and its grime, A ***** old river, her sludge and her slime. Of nature reserves, we have quite a few, From out of our wastelands, something wonderful grew, Wildlife thriving where once we dumped ******* Now even the Mersey lives once more with fish. The factory smells that insulted our noses, Spike Island, proud host once to the Stone Roses, Paul Simon himself, when loneliness found, On one of our stations,  wrote Homeward Bound. The Beatles once played our dear Queens Hall, Derelict now, no more curtains to call, We love our music live and loud, We truly are a passionate crowd. A sporty town, but leagues our game, Tho’ recent years have been quite a shame, Myler, Karalius, Davies, Offiah, Crowned World champs, our status climbed higher. Proud we cheered in old Naughton Park, The cowsheds, cold, smelly and dark, The glory days, they came and went, Old fans speak in sad lament. The whole town’s roads, my how they’ve changed, Drivers sit there now, all deranged, Confusing sets of roundabouts, That lead us there, or thereabouts. Morrisons, Aldi and now a Tesco, Asda Halebank, well that had to go, A curious accent, not manc or scouse, Just hear us speak with Woolyback nouse. W’s in words, like one, two, three, foewer, And entering homes, through a front doewer, It’s hard to explain in a few lines here, But a few minutes in town, and all becomes clear. Bowling, cinema and now an ice rink, The town is recovering, back from the brink, There’s Costa, Next, Boots and Wilkos, Who else is coming, no one quite knows. Widnes has changed in my 40 years, But filled with hopes now instead of fears, Change for the better? Let’s wait and see, But no matter what, she’s still home to me. © Cinco Espiritus Creation 2012
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