Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
We sit on the fence that surrounds the field, Yehudit and I, watching cows move and munch, sun on our heads, hands by our sides to help us balance. Will the pond be ok? she says, looking at me, her eyes bright, the smile forming, the brown hair gripped and ribboned. Should be fine, I say, providing there's none about, except the ducks and swans and dragonflies hovering across the water's skin. We climb down from the fence, stretch our legs, rub our backsides, and walk off towards the pond, hand in hand. My mother's suspicious, Yehudit says, wonders where I go when I leave the house, and asks: who are you with? and I say, Benny, the boy down by the roadway, whose father's a forester. What does she say to that? I ask, feeling her warm hand in mine, her thumb rubbing the back of hand's skin, seemingly good, but to her mother no doubt, a sin. What do you get up to? she asks, and I say: nothing, just walk and see the birds and trees and sit by the pond and watch the ducks and swans and dragonflies. And what does she say to that? I ask, sensing her perfume (her mother's borrowed), feeling alive, flushing with want. She just stares and shakes her head and says: is that all? Of course, I say, what else? and she turns away with a sigh and that stern look in her eye. The pond is deserted, except for a few ducks and a swan swimming around, a dragonfly hovering over the way. We sit on the grass and stare. Then I bring her into my side ward glance, her body clothed in dress of green and black wool stockings and whatever else beneath I have not, as yet, seen. We had *** here a week or so ago, back in the wooded area out of sight, just us alone, except for ducks and swans and dragonflies in flight.
0
Mar 12, 2016
Mar 12, 2016 at 3:45 AM UTC
AS DRAGONFLIES FLY 1962
We sit on the fence that surrounds the field, Yehudit and I, watching cows move and munch, sun on our heads, hands by our sides to help us balance. Will the pond be ok? she says, looking at me, her eyes bright, the smile forming, the brown hair gripped and ribboned. Should be fine, I say, providing there's none about, except the ducks and swans and dragonflies hovering across the water's skin. We climb down from the fence, stretch our legs, rub our backsides, and walk off towards the pond, hand in hand. My mother's suspicious, Yehudit says, wonders where I go when I leave the house, and asks: who are you with? and I say, Benny, the boy down by the roadway, whose father's a forester. What does she say to that? I ask, feeling her warm hand in mine, her thumb rubbing the back of hand's skin, seemingly good, but to her mother no doubt, a sin. What do you get up to? she asks, and I say: nothing, just walk and see the birds and trees and sit by the pond and watch the ducks and swans and dragonflies. And what does she say to that? I ask, sensing her perfume (her mother's borrowed), feeling alive, flushing with want. She just stares and shakes her head and says: is that all? Of course, I say, what else? and she turns away with a sigh and that stern look in her eye. The pond is deserted, except for a few ducks and a swan swimming around, a dragonfly hovering over the way. We sit on the grass and stare. Then I bring her into my side ward glance, her body clothed in dress of green and black wool stockings and whatever else beneath I have not, as yet, seen. We had *** here a week or so ago, back in the wooded area out of sight, just us alone, except for ducks and swans and dragonflies in flight.
A BOY AND GIRL BY A POND IN 1962
TerryCollett
Written by
Mar 12, 2016
Mar 12, 2016 at 3:45 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem