Skinned knee, tree-barked knuckles, fights in the long grass pal. Friends so long that we've our own, private language (which renders these public outpourings largely irrelevant) and can go years, now, with no contact yet never really be apart.
Last Christmas we hooked up, marvelled at the passing of time, and you recalled that the last time we met I gave you a book of my poems.
"Did you read them?" I asked, and brilliantly, unembarrassed, you replied: "No. I looked at the first one, saw that it went over the page, thought: 'Oh, that's long - I'll read that later,' but I never did." And we laughed uproariously as I seldom do with anyone else.
But I know that long after every other copy has been thumbed ragged, misplaced, passed on and lost your copy will remain pristine and safe on your shelf
Because although you have no more interest in poetry now than either of us did at the age of eleven, you'll look after it because your pal wrote it.