The Man in the Street
By Silver Spun Sand
- 5342 reads
More often than not,
he’d stay home;
cook for her,
feed her...wash her...
cut her fingernails,
when she’d let him.
Read to her,
clean for her,
put fresh linen
on her bed,
comb and brush
her hair, but sometimes
he’d get on a bus...
to simply talk
to whoever would listen.
Longing, as he did,
for conversation
he never
got from her.
Buy himself a treat;
a pack of tobacco.
Grab a coffee
in the square – watch
the passers by...
Light his pipe, blow
smoke rings in the air,
then tap it out
on the arm of his chair...
watch the ash
fall
to the ground
midst a cacophony
of pigeons -
like bits
and pieces
of the rest
of his life.
Stroll through the park
as night fell...
elbow the stars
with somebody,
or other – did Dad.
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Comments
A very nice slice of
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Hi Tina, I agree with Pia,
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Thoroughly deserved cherry
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A brief, compact poem that
barryj1
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new Silver-Spun-Sand Hi!
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A lovely and sad read. re
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Thankyou Tina, about loving
"I will make sense with a few reads \^^/ "
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Going back into the ABC
Going back into the ABC archives can be so rewarding - this is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Picture credit: http://tinyurl.com/n3gjoxq
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Lovely to read a poem from
Lovely to read a poem from you again, Tina. I think, when I've been on here, I may have missed you as it's always hit and miss with who you see. I loved all of it but most of all 'elbow the stars' for some reason. It's a picture of both committment and survival. And all I'll say extra is God bless the NHS and what's left of it. x
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