St James Primary, Reading
I’m working back to the dreamtime
of St James Primary in sixty-three,
the occluded and innocent days
before the gadgets and money took over –
like trying to retrieve the original colours
of bright, ridged slabs of plasticine
from muddied clumps we used
for project work in the afternoons –
my finest effort the model I made
with Terence O’Neill of the martyrdom
of Hugh Cook Faringdon
that earned us two gold stars.
In our tiny enclave we were swamped
by history: a Victorian church,
where we crocodiled to Mass
on Wednesdays, praying hard for Russians;
and the airy, abandoned ruins
of an abbey that kept the secret
of a good king’s bones, its wrecked
high windows hoarding space.
Boys and girls, we never discovered
the mysteries of the others’ playground,
but chanted tables daily –
our paean to the god of rote learning.