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Daily Archives: July 28, 2025

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin Town

Old Dublin, ah, the tales you hold,
In cobbled lanes and hearts grown old.
Your whispers echo down the quay,
From Ha’penny Bridge to old Dalkey.

Gaslamps flicker in evening mist,
Where lovers once walked hand-in-wrist.
Horse-drawn carts on Grafton rumbled,
As street cries through the morning tumbled.

The Liffey flows through time and song,
Past Liberty’s echoes, proud and strong.
Where Molly Malone, in statue still,
Pushes her cart near Stephen’s hill.

A pint in hand at dusk’s fair call,
In snug old pubs with timbered wall.
The fiddle weeps, the bodhrán pounds,
In smoky air where joy abounds.

Tall tenements with washing lines,
Where children played in simpler times.
The echo of a skipping rope,
And dreams strung up with threadbare hope.

The chatter of the markets’ din,
Moore Street calls, a cheeky grin.
With apples, tales, and Dublin wit,
Where every stall was truth and skit.

A poet’s breath, a rebel’s fire,
A city’s soul that won’t retire.
Though times have changed and roads are new,
Old Dublin’s heart beats strong and true.

So raise a glass and tip your cap,
To all who walked your winding map.
Old Dublin, dear, you still enthrall—
The fairest city of them all.

dublin in the rare old times
 
 

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Sunbury on Thames 1960s

Sunbury on Thames 1960s

Sunbury, Sweet Sunbury (1960s Dream)
by the banks of the Thames, where the willows lean low…

In Sunbury town, where the river would gleam,
And boys kicked balls on the village green,
The milk came clinking at quarter to eight,
And neighbours would nod through each white garden gate.

The sixties had come with its twist and its shout,
But in Sunbury, life just pottered about—
With the butcher, the baker, the shop on the bend,
And children who vanished till teatime’s end.

We rode our bikes with streamers and pride,
Past hedges and hedgerows, arms open wide,
The gasworks still rumbled, the pylons stood tall,
And the ice cream man chimed down the lane by the wall.

The corner shop smelled of mint and of dust,
Of licorice strings and halfpenny trust.
The Thames flowed lazy, in no frantic race,
Just meandering softly past place after place.

Sunday meant roast, and a flickering telly—
With Dixon or Steptoe or old Albert Kelly.
We dreamed of space rockets, of mods in the city,
Yet Sunbury stayed still, and stubbornly pretty.

Schooldays were chalkboards and ink on the shirt,
Of beetles in jars and knees caked in dirt.
Teachers with slippers, and slipperier rules,
And mums in their curlers outside of the schools.

The smell of the river, the hum of the train,
The fog on the towpath, the patter of rain.
A town in a pocket of time now long passed,
Yet the memory of Sunbury seems always to last.

So here’s to the town where the boathouses doze,
Where willow trees whisper old secrets they know.
Though decades may pass and the world rearrange,
Dear Sunbury’s soul—may it never quite change.

sunbury on thames 1960s
 
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Posted by on July 28, 2025 in sunbury on thames

 

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