The Costa Blanca
Two sonnets
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The Costa Blanca! Skies without a stain! |
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Eric and I at almond-blossom time |
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Came here and fell in love with it. The climb |
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Under the pine trees, up the dusty lane |
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To Casa Kenilworth, brought back again |
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Our honeymoon, when I was in my prime. |
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Good-bye democracy and smoke and grime: |
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Eric retires next year. We’re off to Spain! |
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We’ve got the perfect site beside the shore, |
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Owned by a charming Spaniard, Miguel, |
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Who says that he is quite prepared to sell |
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And build our Casa for us and, what’s more, |
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Preposterously cheaply. We have found |
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Delightful English people living round. |
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HE (five years later) |
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Mind if I see your Mail? We used to share |
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Our Telegraph with people who’ve returned— |
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The lucky sods! I’ll tell you what I’ve learned: |
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If you come out here put aside the fare |
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To England. I’d run like a bloody hare |
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If I’d a chance, and how we both have yearned |
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To see our Esher lawn. I think we’ve earned |
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A bit of what we had once over there. |
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That Dago caught the wife and me all right! |
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Here on this tideless, tourist-littered sea |
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We’re stuck. You’d hate it too if you were me: |
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There’s no piped water on the bloody site. |
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Our savings gone, we climb the stony path |
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Back to the house with scorpions in the bath. |