08-29-2014, 09:03 AM
You are old now.
Almost thirty, sitting in a bar off Broad Street
finally talking of the tally of the dark years.
Afraid of some ghost gathered
under the light of the blue hotel,
you keep looking back over your shoulder
and ask in a voice reproachful and low,
about a woman you heard I left,
but because I have not made sense of things,
I laugh in denial and phrase my response
to sound as if we departed friends.
There was a doll our mother bought
which hummed Mary Had A Little Lamb.
For years you could not sleep until you heard it,
which was all I could think of that day,
a decade later, when we sat in the woods
as teenagers and you asked what I knew of love.
In your hair a long dark lock
falls to the tattoos you have a hidden,
as we rise and clamor into the night.
We leave again – we were always
leaving each other with not enough said -
to your car with a rattling axle,
which you park on a side street,
where up the stairs, past all understanding,
your eyes have grown dark and wide like our mother.
So, listen. I am thirty now.
I always felt strange. I learned to live with it.
I felt alone at times. Others, I felt scared.
I know that I loved a handful of women.
I know, also, that it did not good.
Almost thirty, sitting in a bar off Broad Street
finally talking of the tally of the dark years.
Afraid of some ghost gathered
under the light of the blue hotel,
you keep looking back over your shoulder
and ask in a voice reproachful and low,
about a woman you heard I left,
but because I have not made sense of things,
I laugh in denial and phrase my response
to sound as if we departed friends.
There was a doll our mother bought
which hummed Mary Had A Little Lamb.
For years you could not sleep until you heard it,
which was all I could think of that day,
a decade later, when we sat in the woods
as teenagers and you asked what I knew of love.
In your hair a long dark lock
falls to the tattoos you have a hidden,
as we rise and clamor into the night.
We leave again – we were always
leaving each other with not enough said -
to your car with a rattling axle,
which you park on a side street,
where up the stairs, past all understanding,
your eyes have grown dark and wide like our mother.
So, listen. I am thirty now.
I always felt strange. I learned to live with it.
I felt alone at times. Others, I felt scared.
I know that I loved a handful of women.
I know, also, that it did not good.


