Tar Balls
Each ball was a tangle of rags
Soaked in tar, every inch Brer Rabbit’s
babies, single string clackers
tied with farm wire to a twisted handle,
held at arm’s length, swung to and fro
then higher and overhead
so the centrifugal force
kept the fire from flares and dirndls.
Three streams of flame flowed,
halos of light, from The Lamb,
the scout hut and Taplins farm.
The turning torches converged
at the green across from the church
towards the house-high stack
of wind-fall branches and old pallets
in a procession of glowing faces.
The wranglers circled the bonfire,
still curving their tar balls in the air.
One by one fire-balls flew
some to the heart, some to the head
some became incoming missiles
to the crowd opposite the thrower,
hastily collected in asbestos gloves,
returned to the conflagration.
​
​Villagers would warm their hands,
scoff sausages doused with onions,
hunker down on bales of straw
made sofa-like by farmers’ lads,
sup pints or halves of tepid beer,
watch the young girls cadging
firemen’s lifts and engine rides,
wander off to sing in pub snugs.
But Charlie Hayes is gone ten years,
filled St John’s with paid respects.
His farm split into developments
and no one makes tar balls like him.
The village is mostly stockbrokers
who adore the traditional
but don’t want the green disfigured
by a charred circle through the winter.
This poem invokes memories of my teenage years in Hartley Wintney, a village in the North West corner of Hampshire, quaint and filled with antique shops, a cricket green and two remaining pubs, (the other three closed down including The Lamb). Charlie Hayes was a local dairy farm manager and I went to school with his son Stephen, so was a frequent visitor to the farm. The local branch of the Young Farmers Association was active and were supporters of this annual event. Health and Safety issues have stopped the village bonfire night celebrations but I don't remember any news of injuries despite some of the 'dangerous' practices...we kept alert.