A Small Village in Suffolk by Joseph Long

 


 

Joseph Long lives and works on the Medway as a father and Engineer, writing poetry between shifts. He has a passion for works which reflect working class life & culture and his main influences are John Cooper Clarke, Christopher Reid, Anna Akhmatova, Seamus Heaney, Ian Hamilton & Douglas Dunn.
Joseph has been published by Stand, Blackbox Manifold, The Amethyst Review, Littoral and he was also highly commended in the Erbacce Prize for Poetry in 2024.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo Credits:

Boy on Bike via Pixabay

Nuclear explosion: Image: IWM (TR 65682B)

Lane: Whitechappel79 via Pixabay

Child and Dog: Kanashi via Pixabay

Child Fence: Greyerbaby via Pixabay

Bird Fence: Surely via Pixabay

Barbed Wire Man: FuN_Lucky via Pixabay

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the end of the lane is the end of the line,

a front line – and to rational actors, a line 

in the sand. It was once, just a lane – pitted, rutted. 

Before host nation cared, before the tack tarmac

laden trucks backed up one morning, without warning.

 

Before sheep walks became elephant proof, before 

bridle turned taxiway. In those days of small things, 

we would cycle down to feel spring speedwell against 

sole, nape. To scent sheep-cropped fescue, scatter curlew,

pick scrape for eggs. Our incursions were good tidy

 

before chain links. After links and lateral scars 

were carved in our Breckland sward, did mining bee care? 

Did hare, turn a hair? Would curlew sorties confirm /

deny what was there? There may be no amara!

So, we all sought to play in this rum, conjured base.

 

Before gauges swayed and our Suffolk sands turned to glass. 

Before rolling, oiled cumulus caught us and its 

torrid breeze roiled our broadleaf trees. Before we heard

soundless call or dull pedal notes. Before cuckoo 

clocks got giddy, beneath our feet in rumoured vaults.

 

We boys were curious for more than blast pens or 

tube alloys – and the digger wasp would help us. Help

delve down to those vaults below chalk, clay, flint and silt. 

Where we’d scamper down surety warrens – play war games, 

take names amongst Harvard Candles born of the dawn.

 

Once, our insignificance might have saved us. Since,

we’ve learnt the humility of grazing ruminant – 

ready for ritual slaughter. Generations

of crick neck, sloped back – gazing into the middle 

distance (or below), in our small village in Suffolk.

 

Note: Although never officially confirmed, US nuclear weapons were based at RAF Lakenheath, Suffolk from the 1950s until the 1990s. They are due to return.

 

Joseph Long

 

A Letter to Gilbert White by Robyn Bolam

Poems