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Replying to a comment on:
Mountain Ash, Mid Glamorgan (Free verse) by Nicholas Jones
Staying with my grandparents,
on fine days we would walk
from their house in Caegawr,
past Scoffers fish and chip shop
(Corned beef pies a speciality)
to the playground down the valley.
By the road was Dyffryn Woods,
a tiny, dark and mean patch of trees,
home to a mysterious stone circle
of weather beaten monoliths.
I was only young, and assumed
it was from ancient, Celtic times,
when learned druids performed
complex and magical rituals.
Later, I discovered it was all a fake,
constructed at the turn of the century
to provide some authentic history
for the coming Eisteddfod.
On the way back, by the new rugby field
we would pass the stone winding gear
commemorating the site of Deep Dyffryn,
once the deepest pit in Wales.
And I would wonder how it all looked
ten years previously,
when men like my grandfather
still worked underground.
But best of all, we would climb
high up the mountain over the town
to reach the Rocking Stone.
And so first we would walk
Through overgrown allotments
at the very top of Allen Street,
past abandoned garages
with decaying forgotten cars.
And immediately then came
steep slopes of damp grass and bracken,
(though punctuated by the rusted remains
of old and discarded machinery) -
The high openness was so different
to the smoke and grime of the town
emitted by the smokeless fuel works
along the valley at Abercwmboi.
Look from Penrhiceiber over to Aberdare -
countless straight rows of terraced houses,
the factories and sculpted slagheaps,
the Workman??????s Institute, and more hills
On the other side of the valley.
A crowd makes their way to a rugby match,
while somewhere in the magnificent view
my grandparents are watching for us.
We look down in silence, rest a while,
then continue up towards to the summit.
High above the stagnant dirt of the town
we see a multitude of wimberries,
waiting to be picked.
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