Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
There's a girl I think about, sometimes On wet afternoons, and when I'm on my own Well, she's an older woman now but still a first affection With a family, grown to middle age And a dead husband in her past, somewhere. We knew each other forty years ago, perhaps In an army town; or was it slightly later? We were never intimately joined In those prophylactic, pre-pill times And the frowning fathers, narrow-eyed on the fringes She could drive, and had her mothers car that day We slunk out to a field, to dispose of her virginity But, the military fuzz they quickly found us And took us in to the local station Heart thumping, testosterone levels tumbling That was the last time that we met, I think. We corresponded fitfully, and for a short time after But somehow shame and not a little guilt At what I'd done and left undone, sputtered the phrases and Quite soon the letters stopped arriving. Unconsummated but never quite forgotten, last week A Facebook message in my in-box, unbidden From a name unfamiliar to me, and suspicious "Dear Sir" it read, and proceeded to announce itself Auspicious, as my former lovers son. Can this be you? the lovers son enquired politely My mothers friend that we talked about at Christmas? Triumphant, there mother! I have found him Far across the years and using now's technology Across a lifetime of separateness I sensed in her a broad reluctance, despite the introduction From her child, who's person never was a factor To connect with me again, this different person Risking the diminution of that dimmed image, the remnant Of who we had been that time And why not? Why confuse the layers and the generations? The forewarned spectacle of our sad reunion Uncomfortably eye-ing each other with little left in common Awkward unsaid phrases hanging out to dry In the flag-fluttering breezes of our allusions. But, in fact, there had been another reason I admit For shame that final hour that final day When I had been revealed in all my nakedness as wanting Tongue tied and mumbling my excuses to the sky Youth I was, weak, poor and unconvincing The police were brusque and thoroughly impersonal Growled deep-throated at my love and I. And I; I discarded my affection for security and left her there Disconsolate and disbelieving in the police station More worried about the facing of my father And so we left it then last week with little left unsaid Knowing both it was too late and too unknown For reintroductions as the people we had been Unconvincing in our bright and sharpened protestations Preferring poor relations in a foreign country
0
Nov 26, 2012
Nov 26, 2012 at 5:22 AM UTC
Guilt Reminded
There's a girl I think about, sometimes On wet afternoons, and when I'm on my own Well, she's an older woman now but still a first affection With a family, grown to middle age And a dead husband in her past, somewhere. We knew each other forty years ago, perhaps In an army town; or was it slightly later? We were never intimately joined In those prophylactic, pre-pill times And the frowning fathers, narrow-eyed on the fringes She could drive, and had her mothers car that day We slunk out to a field, to dispose of her virginity But, the military fuzz they quickly found us And took us in to the local station Heart thumping, testosterone levels tumbling That was the last time that we met, I think. We corresponded fitfully, and for a short time after But somehow shame and not a little guilt At what I'd done and left undone, sputtered the phrases and Quite soon the letters stopped arriving. Unconsummated but never quite forgotten, last week A Facebook message in my in-box, unbidden From a name unfamiliar to me, and suspicious "Dear Sir" it read, and proceeded to announce itself Auspicious, as my former lovers son. Can this be you? the lovers son enquired politely My mothers friend that we talked about at Christmas? Triumphant, there mother! I have found him Far across the years and using now's technology Across a lifetime of separateness I sensed in her a broad reluctance, despite the introduction From her child, who's person never was a factor To connect with me again, this different person Risking the diminution of that dimmed image, the remnant Of who we had been that time And why not? Why confuse the layers and the generations? The forewarned spectacle of our sad reunion Uncomfortably eye-ing each other with little left in common Awkward unsaid phrases hanging out to dry In the flag-fluttering breezes of our allusions. But, in fact, there had been another reason I admit For shame that final hour that final day When I had been revealed in all my nakedness as wanting Tongue tied and mumbling my excuses to the sky Youth I was, weak, poor and unconvincing The police were brusque and thoroughly impersonal Growled deep-throated at my love and I. And I; I discarded my affection for security and left her there Disconsolate and disbelieving in the police station More worried about the facing of my father And so we left it then last week with little left unsaid Knowing both it was too late and too unknown For reintroductions as the people we had been Unconvincing in our bright and sharpened protestations Preferring poor relations in a foreign country
Written by
Nov 26, 2012
Nov 26, 2012 at 5:22 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem