
Hometown
I used to walk my hometown main street
Take my time, meander a bit, no car needed, just my feet
From one end to the other unencumbered by crowds
When everyday life was not so atrociously loud.
When one strip of shops held everything needed
Where window shopping was unimpeded
Unless you happened to meet a friend on the way
And that chance meeting just brightened your day.
I think of my Dad and what he would say
How his lifelong haunt has gotten this way
How the grocer and butcher are now part of a mall
Friendly greetings are gone, he’d be appalled.
As a kid I climbed rocks where river meets sea
And loved nothing more than climbing a tree
The magical one at the home of my friend
Where we travelled the world until almost day’s end.
And a whistle call beckoned me home.
Riding my bike, being out and about
On the street with my friends or just hanging out
In their backyard or maybe the park
And then hightailing it home before it got dark.
I now live in a city and at the end of the day
There is hustle and bustle and I want to say,
Slow down, step lightly, look at the faces, smile at a few
You never know, they may smile at you too.
My hometown has changed, the shops rearranged
Riverside rocks replaced by a road, stories of old may never be told
It now has a new crowd, the old mostly gone
It’s hard to believe that I used to belong.