At the low end of town
Stands the old Bassa Villa
‘The Magpie’ of renown
Half-timbered, imposing
On the bank of the
river
Bassa Villa has a story
Which makes people
shiver
Year fifteen
ninety-three
Was the time it became
The Magpie, an ale
house
And tragedy brought
fame
It may be a legend
For no proof remains
Yet the story lives on
Of two poor drowned
bairns
They played in the
cellar
And none heard them
shout
The Severn seeped in
And they couldn’t get
out
Charlotte and William
Were the children who
died
Left a mother grief-stricken
No infants by her side
Her death left her
restless
She inhabits the rooms
Eternally mourning
The babes in their
tombs
Glasses fall from the
shelves
With no obvious cause
There are unexplained groans
From old windows and floors
For a time the young
children
Were carved into stone
They watched from the
terrace
The fierce waters below
Now they are long gone
No statues look down
But the woman in black
Still haunts the Low
Town
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1 comment:
Like the Severn, this poem flows seamlessly to tell its tragic tale. Sad and beautiful
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