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For the pubs you remember as a child....this poem is a hundred memories |
| A scarred and dusty bar-top One million overlapping rings decorate the wood And the odd burn from a careless smoker Whose attention had been devoted to talk Or the muted TV high in the corner And not the smoldering fag-end in his hand Seven taps along the counter Each displaying a familiar name and badge And for the ladies; dusty bottles of gin on shelves That run along a tarnished mirror Aging whiskies and exotic rums for the connoisseur Fizzy sweet orange juice for the children, sticky to touch And on the walls the pictures Tell a story of a thousand words Of friends and foes, family and strangers Of winning teams and epic games Lets not forget the saints- JFK and John Paul II Who look down from their positions above the marble mantel Which sits across the smoky peat fire That crackles and pops on cold winter days And draws you to its dancing flames Outside rain thrashes and a bitter wind blows But in this place you are in the warm heart of the world And the old clock by the door ticks away another Sunday |