| Wickerman |
Cocker / Banks / Doyle / Mackey / Webber
Just behind the station, before you reach the
traffic island, a river runs thru' a concrete channel. I took you there
once; I think it was after the Leadmill. The water was dirty & smelt of
industrialisation, little mesters coughing their lungs up & globules the
colour of tomato ketchup. But it flows. Yeah, it flows. Underneath the city
thru' dirty brickwork conduits, connecting white witches on the Moor with
pre-raphaelites down in Broomhall. Beneath the old Trebor factory that burnt
down in the early seventies. Leaving an antiquated sweet-shop smell &
caverns of nougat & caramel. Nougat. Yeah, nougat & caramel. &
the river flows on. Yeah, the river flows on beneath pudgy fifteen-year olds
addicted to coffee whitener, courting couples naked on Northern Upholstery &
pensioners gathering dust like bowls of plastic tulips. & it finally comes
above ground again at Forge Dam: the place where we first met.
I
went there again for old time's sake, hoping to find the child's toy horse ride
that played such a ridiculously tragic tune. It was still there - but none of
the kids seemed interested in riding on it. & the cafe was still there too;
the same press-in plastic letters on the price list & scuffed formica-top
tables. I sat as close as possible to the seat where I'd met you that autumn
afternoon. & then, after what seemed like hours of thinking about it, I
finally took your face in my hands & I kissed you for the first time & a
feeling like electricity flowed thru' my whole body. & I immediately knew
that I'd entered a completely different world. & all the time, in the
background, the sound of that ridiculously heartbreaking child's ride outside.
At
the other end of town the river flows underneath an old railway viaduct; I went
there with you once - except you were somebody else - & we gazed down at the
sludgy brown surface of the water together. Then a passer-by told us that it
used to be a local custom to jump off the viaduct into the river, when coming
home from the pub on a Saturday night. But that this custom had died out when
someone jumped & landed too near to the riverbank & had sunk in
the mud there & drowned before anyone could reach them. I don't know
if he'd just made the whole story up, but there's no way you'd get me to jump
off that bridge. No chance. Never in a million years.
Yeah, a river
flows underneath this city, I'd like to go there with you now my pretty &
follow it on for miles & miles, below other people's ordinary lives. Occasionally
catching a glimpse of the moon, thru' man-hole covers along the route.
Yeah, it's dark sometimes but if you hold my hand, I think I know the way. Oh,
this is as far as we got last time but if we go just another mile we will
surface surrounded by grass & trees & the fly-over that takes the cars
to cities. Buds that explode at the slightest touch, nettles that sting - but
not too much. I've never been past this point, what lies ahead I really could
not say. & I used to live just by the river, in a dis-used factory just off
the Wicker & the river flowed by day after day & "One day" I
thought, "One day I will follow it" but that day never came; I moved
away & lost track but tonight I am thinking about making my way back. I may
find you there & float on wherever the river may take me. Wherever the river
may take me. Wherever the river may take us. Wherever it wants us to go.
Wherever it wants us to go.