The Costa Blanca

Two sonnets

SHE

   

The Costa Blanca! Skies without a stain!

   

   

Eric and I at almond-blossom time

   

   

Came here and fell in love with it. The climb

   

   

Under the pine trees, up the dusty lane

   

   

To Casa Kenilworth, brought back again

   

   

Our honeymoon, when I was in my prime.

   

   

Good-bye democracy and smoke and grime:

   

   

Eric retires next year. We’re off to Spain!

   

   

   

   

   

We’ve got the perfect site beside the shore,

   

   

Owned by a charming Spaniard, Miguel,

   

   

Who says that he is quite prepared to sell

   

   

And build our Casa for us and, what’s more,

   

   

Preposterously cheaply. We have found

   

   

Delightful English people living round.

   

   

   

HE (five years later)

   

   

Mind if I see your Mail? We used to share

   

   

Our Telegraph with people who’ve returned—

   

   

The lucky sods! I’ll tell you what I’ve learned:

   

   

If you come out here put aside the fare

   

   

To England. I’d run like a bloody hare

   

   

If I’d a chance, and how we both have yearned

   

   

To see our Esher lawn. I think we’ve earned

   

   

A bit of what we had once over there.

   

   

   

   

   

That Dago caught the wife and me all right!

   

   

Here on this tideless, tourist-littered sea

   

   

We’re stuck. You’d hate it too if you were me:

   

   

There’s no piped water on the bloody site.

   

   

Our savings gone, we climb the stony path

   

   

Back to the house with scorpions in the bath.