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Nature, As Man Intended |
FENMAN Fenman loves to take the hand of nature As he walks the banks of the River Glen in spring From old Kate’s Bridge down to Tongue End Pump He’ll tread the paths and walk the byways He’ll peer out over the Baston Edge He’ll hear the melodious running water Jiggling down between her raised breasts He’ll trample on down by the ghost of Jubilee Bridge And ride with the Swallow on its wing His senses here are stroked by nature The hairs are standing on his neck Creating shivers on his spine Gazing out and over the Wilderness Sees once black bog Now a cultured green The Peat that built up over millennia Is such a pleasure to be seen The brilliant skills of migrant Dutchmen Have left their mark upon this land And drained it fertile There are ghostly silouettes of long dead Oaks As black and as hard as a Fen-man’s hat His ever changing monument To the prehistoric forest Fenman is at home in this landscape As he ambles on down to Tongue End’s tip He looks up west and sees The acned spot Where tired steel refreshes In creative heat The Foundry of the Fen He’ll stumble over a startled pheasant That flees away in diarrhoeic haste His own adrenalin freely flowing At its sudden flight Fenman here is the hand of nature And here the hand has been well led The mighty hand is steered by Farmers It is big steel fingers that shape this heaven With power that comes from Fossil Muscle Belching its breath into the high ozone Fenman now communes with nature Keeps the landscape looking clean Spring is changing the deep black peat To a million shades of exotic green Myriad little green soldiers Standing erect In dead straight lines Bending their backs in obedience To the winds command Fenman knows the harvest will come Fenman strides the Bourne Eau Spoil Where St Peter’s tears of joy Flow down towards the Glen Streaming over the cheeks of heaven For this is a face of God Fenman strolls up to the Car Dyke turn Heading back to his homely twins Northorpe and Thurlby are their given names Finds the place where attendant nursing Angels Have used their skills to attend the sick A Hospital Bourne Chest by name A mile it is to Northorpe Fen When Car Dyke Bridge looms into sight Romans built this waterway What a presence they still have today It fills his soul to overflow As he views the horizon on the east His heart beats a great deal faster As he’s drawn across the new Poole Bridge St Firmin’s Churchyard A thousand years there stood For this is where the bodies of Fenmen lie In the dank cold ground they’ve turned to dust They are alive forever Alive in this nature Wherever Fenman goes Between the River Glen and Bourne Eau banks He is with the eternal trio The Past The Present And the Future This is where his soul is For Fenman This is home The city is not par With this |