
there is an England of sycamore trees dappled in sunlight their dalmation leaves standing guard over verges of ginnels between houses whose doors bear a welcome, kettles ever bubbling, sofas ever dented from shared laughter at daftness of ice cream vans tinkling their way through the 99 dreams and the skipping of children, fists full of piggybank raidings of dads with tall tales for wideopen little ears, their secret codes of clicks and winks velcro for wonderment of bus drivers dispensing directions like boiled sweets to confused old wayfarers in the marathon weave between bellringing and the door of post office clerks’ fascination and patience at a pensioner’s to-do list exchanged like currency, new pennies for gold nuggets of pub quizzers pondering that one crucial question they’ll have forgotten when asked in the morning, wiped like brows at chuckingout time of handholding old couples, ramblers, amblers, schoolteachers, cookingfat splashed forearms wrapping lunch in fish and chip paper gone stale, unread there is an England in streetlights and shadows, in terraces and shops open hands bearing chipped mugs of tea, with extra biscuits for pilgrims. Harry Gallagher
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