Pershore Station, or A Liverish Journey First Class

The train at Pershore station was waiting that Sunday night

Gas light on the platform, in my carriage electric light,

Gas light on frosty evergreens, electric on Empire wood,

The Victorian world and the present in a moment’s neighbourhood.

There was no one about but a conscript who was saying good-bye to his love

On the windy weedy platform with the sprinkled stars above

When sudden the waiting stillness shook with the ancient spells

Of an older world than all our worlds in the sound of the Pershore bells.

They were ringing them down for Evensong in the lighted abbey near,

Sounds which had poured through apple boughs for seven centuries here.

With Guilt, Remorse, Eternity the void within me fills

And I thought of her left behind me in the Herefordshire hills.

I remembered her defencelessness as I made my heart a stone

Till she wove her self-protection round and left me on my own.

And plunged in a deep self pity I dreamed of another wife

And lusted for freckled faces and lived a separate life.

One word would have made her love me, one word would have made her turn

But the word I never murmured and now I am left to burn.

Evesham, Oxford and London. The carriage is new and smart.

I am cushioned and soft and heated with a deadweight in my heart.