Lewisham & Harrow

By: 

Jamie Hale

& Daljit Nagra

J

The field here by day is throbbing. Drill-master ex-army

workouts, blonde women sprint with their buggies.

At night, the music is thrumming. Car-speaker bass.

I fight the desire to dance, the neighbour calls the cops.

 

D

During lockdown we go for walks in our park in Harrow,

some live on the Hill while most of us live down below

on the plains. I’m on the path and pass a man in Barbour

speak to his phone, ‘yes, the horse I once bought in Russia’.

 

J

Here’s a striding space of grass. I look to London, modernity’s

spires strike upwards. The shard holds a cloud, a stag,

pierces sky on its antlers. The day, almost clear, is bright,

My dog sees a fox, pricks his ears, and pulls. I stop.

 

D

Boys in boaters and stripey blazers, weeping

willows, a view past Wembley Arch to the gherkin,

I’m up at Harrow on the Hill, I’m heading for a pint

at The Castle, the only place up here I’m ever inside.

 

J

The air is fresh nowhere here. I feel it – the smog,

An oily, dust in my lungs. But birds can bear it, I hear

the wild parakeet calling, calling. Tell me, friend

when did you last see an unbuilt skyline? Are you free?

 

D

You’ve a dog Jamie? We’ve a pup, a cockapoo

black with a snowy streak bearding his tum

to his chin, he’s all licky at every dog; a new

world of walkers befriend me and my mutt.

 

J

Small? Ours knows the greying world, long-nose

blue, white star, and socks. Career’s well-past,

unstoried, raced poorly on the tracks. His da

was famous, him not so much, but gentle and soft

 

D

Sounds of sports in Harrow Rec by the pavilion:

boundrry, boundrry stand at da boundrry, howzzzat?

the footie fields: Ref! Markup! Where’s your man.

Ours! Get tight on him. He’s there, at your back!

 

J

The sports up here are quieter – maybe I just

don’t pass by at their times. Yoga mats multiply

on the grass like desperate beach-towels lusting

against the damp for the warmth of winter sun

 

D

Yes we’ve the various mat crews throughout the day.

I assume those postures they project are for yoga:

the elderly folk walk for the park and at it till late,

I’ve a few years left before I join them to bend ov

er…ooh me coccyx,

I’m feeling seasick.

 

J

Steady up! It’s funny how our bodies are the same

London over – and yet so different. Funny also

how London itself is the same, and even our dogs

so different, so free, so loved, are somehow the same.

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Our Members are champions of literature. Their support makes our engagement work in schools and prisons possible and they enable us to celebrate literature in all its wonderful diversity. As a thank you, we give them all the joys of a literary festival and book club rolled into one, all year round.