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Today Poem by Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion
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Today have commissioned a poem exclusively for the programme about Foot and Mouth, from the Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion.
No Entry
Where the lane curved, and sidled side- ways as if tricked by a water-burst, and the fawn gravel dwindled into clay thinning above a fabulous patchwork of pressed car bodies buried to made a path, there was this dense, ivy-decked thorn hedge I could just see over and into the square Red Tabor had made home for his one sow slumped and massive, fierce but dingy orange pineapple skin, embarrassing nude quivers under a hail of flies - snoozing and snorting her slow days through between litters.
Then NO ENTRY where the gravel wore out. A wire barricade. The wind's wiry song. A rank of plump oil barrels and a sign with Red's higgledy paint-letters trickling exhausted, puddling thick at their feet. I trudged home sorry and out-of-place, a guilty thing, but another lifetime on turn back, towards a drizzling screen of long fires and longer trench-gashes, timber and tyre smoke-castles crumbling over the glass, with their barbecue stench impossible to catch but not to remember.
I am peering over the same thorn hedge, elbows cushioned on lush pads of ivy-leaf, and into the square. There is the brown hump of corrugated iron like a miniature hangar and dusky hush inside. There is the mud in stiff crests. There is the slope and farm with red cramming his whole kitchen window to glare through me and beyond, over his fields empty under the tall sky, and further still over the dales and valley, the chalk plains, their fells and glens where bright Spring grass shoots useless under the blind eye of heaven.
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