Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I knock on Hannah's parent's door, rain spitting down, the morning air fresh and lung biting. Mrs Scot opens the door: O it's ye, she says, eyebrows rising, eyes peering at me hawk-like. I've come to see Hannah, I say. Ah didne hink ye came tae see me, she says, moving back to allow me to pass by. I pass her by like a mouse passing a cat, my eyes sidewards gazing at her, and moving past as quick as I can. She closes the door and calls: th' boy's haur, gie it ay scratcher. She indicates I go into the lounge, I do and sit down. HANNAH! She bellows. She goes off to the kitchen, and I look around the room. Just coming, won't be long, Hannah says from her bedroom. Her mother says something incomprehensible, and then all is quiet, except for the ticking of a clock. The curtains are drawn back allowing light to enter the room (providing it has wiped its feet first bringing Dylan Thomas to mind). The picture of a kilted man stares at me. He has big eyebrows like dark caterpillars. On the mantelshelf is a photograph of Hannah and her parents and her brother who is away. The bedroom doors opens and Hannah appears. Hello, she says, I overslept, just going for a wash, and she is gone. Dornt be lang, her mother says. Be quick as Ah can, Hannah calls back. Water runs, splash, splash. She's a lazy huir, her mother says, coming into the lounge, holding a cup and saucer of tea for me, puts it down, smiles the thinnest lip smile, then goes again. Outside, as I look through the window, is heavy rain.
0
Sep 30, 2016
Sep 30, 2016 at 3:27 AM UTC
ENTER FRIEND 1960.
I knock on Hannah's parent's door, rain spitting down, the morning air fresh and lung biting. Mrs Scot opens the door: O it's ye, she says, eyebrows rising, eyes peering at me hawk-like. I've come to see Hannah, I say. Ah didne hink ye came tae see me, she says, moving back to allow me to pass by. I pass her by like a mouse passing a cat, my eyes sidewards gazing at her, and moving past as quick as I can. She closes the door and calls: th' boy's haur, gie it ay scratcher. She indicates I go into the lounge, I do and sit down. HANNAH! She bellows. She goes off to the kitchen, and I look around the room. Just coming, won't be long, Hannah says from her bedroom. Her mother says something incomprehensible, and then all is quiet, except for the ticking of a clock. The curtains are drawn back allowing light to enter the room (providing it has wiped its feet first bringing Dylan Thomas to mind). The picture of a kilted man stares at me. He has big eyebrows like dark caterpillars. On the mantelshelf is a photograph of Hannah and her parents and her brother who is away. The bedroom doors opens and Hannah appears. Hello, she says, I overslept, just going for a wash, and she is gone. Dornt be lang, her mother says. Be quick as Ah can, Hannah calls back. Water runs, splash, splash. She's a lazy huir, her mother says, coming into the lounge, holding a cup and saucer of tea for me, puts it down, smiles the thinnest lip smile, then goes again. Outside, as I look through the window, is heavy rain.
A BOY GOES TO SEE HIS GIRL FRIEND IN 1960.
TerryCollett
Written by
Sep 30, 2016
Sep 30, 2016 at 3:27 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem