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Replying to a comment on:
Welsh Landscape Part One (Free verse) by Nicholas Jones
my father insisted
we drive through Cwmystwyth
on the way to Aber
where I was due to consult
dusty manuscripts in the
Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru
as we approached it he told me
'Cwmystwyth is the bleakest place in Wales'
I jokingly asked him if it was
bleaker than his own home town,
and he replied simply
that it made his native mining valley
look like an English country garden
then the hills opened out
and the sun disappeared
there was no sound
and, temporarily, we did not speak
we entered the cwm to see
empty houses
derelict for decades
old workings perched on scree slopes
abandoned when they and the workers
became uneconomic
the remains of extractive industry
digging smelting manufacturing
chemicals enter the water and ground
to make contaminated land useful to no-one
the Romans mined here first
then there was continuous industry
for two thousand years until the depression
then abandonment
leave the place
to its own devices
a remote valley
that can never be recovered
my father tells me later
he last visited this place
forty years ago
and nobody has bothered
to tidy it up or sweep it away
just a scar with no purpose
untouched and unloved
neither of us wish to pursue
the metaphors that it suggests to us
I cannot describe
my father's expression
no solutions have been offered in his lifetime
he sees stagnation of his culture
and drives quickly
to avoid the meaning of the place
but I think instead
better this bleakness
than a shiny tourist hell
full of illustrated exhibitions
and jaunty recreations
telling the history
of our fine nation
four pounds entrance fee
suitable for young children
no overtones of death
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