Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
They have been together, give or take, for fifteen years. Their marriage in the clasp of puberty, its voice deepening, its stubble sprouting. Not long ago, shopping. Necessary. Kid’s birthday. It comes around quick, like lunch, paying for the Ploughman’s at the self-service in town when the clock flicks to twelve. Her right hand on his right hand. They still do this, though not quite as often. Today, he returns from work, wrenches the tie out from beneath the collar of a shirt she ironed yesterday. Son, out. Daughter, also out. The fridge plagued with magnets and a list; Milk,                   Bread,                   Eggs? Inside, two beers, sweating cold. Later, he thinks. How’s your day been darling? We need to be at the school at six. Oh yes. They need to hear how their progenies excel at the expressive arts. He hasn’t been expressive in years. Hours expire. Now his bare feet slide under the duvet. The wife reads a while, Sunday Times bestseller. Then she hugs him, touches the skin she has known since she was nineteen at Northampton, literary sponge absorbing Shakespeare and Joyce. It is warm. It is something that has not changed. The two of them are content. They know they can always have this.
0
Aug 28, 2018
Aug 28, 2018 at 6:01 PM UTC
Shopping List
They have been together, give or take, for fifteen years. Their marriage in the clasp of puberty, its voice deepening, its stubble sprouting. Not long ago, shopping. Necessary. Kid’s birthday. It comes around quick, like lunch, paying for the Ploughman’s at the self-service in town when the clock flicks to twelve. Her right hand on his right hand. They still do this, though not quite as often. Today, he returns from work, wrenches the tie out from beneath the collar of a shirt she ironed yesterday. Son, out. Daughter, also out. The fridge plagued with magnets and a list; Milk,                   Bread,                   Eggs? Inside, two beers, sweating cold. Later, he thinks. How’s your day been darling? We need to be at the school at six. Oh yes. They need to hear how their progenies excel at the expressive arts. He hasn’t been expressive in years. Hours expire. Now his bare feet slide under the duvet. The wife reads a while, Sunday Times bestseller. Then she hugs him, touches the skin she has known since she was nineteen at Northampton, literary sponge absorbing Shakespeare and Joyce. It is warm. It is something that has not changed. The two of them are content. They know they can always have this.
Written: August 2018. Explanation: A poem written in my own time. Please note that 'Joyce' refers to the former Irish writer James Joyce, 'Ploughman's' refers to a term sometimes used for a cheese and pickle sandwich in the UK, while Northampton is a town in England - the nearest large town to where I live, and also where I studied my undergraduate degree.
reece-aj-chambers
Written by
33/M/English
Aug 28, 2018
Aug 28, 2018 at 6:01 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem