The Longest Day
By Bee
- 3624 reads
The quickening thrill
still trembles in the memory
of my palm cupped gently
lest I crushed the terrible delicacy
and tender fragility
of embryonic beginnings.
They thought me young to bear
the burden of responsibility.
The kindest thing - to kill it
and put it out of future misery.
But stubbornly I clung
to the beat of a minuscule heart
and the feather breath of chance
for as long as I could hold it.
I walked the length of day, light
in the knowledge of the proof
of the life I held in my hands.
They caught up every now and then
to try their best persuasions on me,
but doggedly I clung to hope
in all the vagueness
of finding ways to nurture
the winged and legged thing
that fluttered moths
of excitement in my belly
every time it flickered movement.
I vowed I'd feed it -
I wanted and needed it -
the mother in me yearning,
yet learning against my will to listen.
As curtains cloaked the day
They were waiting, knowing
I'd return to reason.
And anyway, at just 13
I didn't have the power to decide -
the hour had come. And so
I opened my defeated hands
revealing hunger in bright and ugly beauty,
her blind eyes bulging dark goodbyes;
softly beaked gratitude for useless kindness.
I don't know where they took my chick
but later heard they'd crushed it
with a brick. The kindest thing, they said.
and hope was dead that day
so long ago.
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Comments
I take it this is about a
I take it this is about a spring fledgling? Some bits seemed to be leading towards a deeper subject close to your heart (eg that fluttered moths of excitement in my belly every time it flickered movement). You capture some of your emerging feelings well. Rhiannon
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Oh dear, Dads and small
Oh dear, Dads and small creatures. Your slug at the Wheatsheaf fared no better, Bee and I like slugs especially the black rubbery ones that appear to be manufactured out of Goodyear tyres. My father was often the family softie, one year he put down strawberry nets. I remember him in the back garden on the bench with the nail scissors, painstakingly cutting out the net, it took him a good half hour, so that a small heart-beating struggling thrush was able to fly free and that was the last of our strawberry nets. It was better to let the birds get the berries than to let the neighbourhood cats get the trapped birds. And then we had a greengage tree, lovely luscious green plums. Of course when we had our summer fortnight by the sea the wasps dived in and pretty much got the lot.
An effective poem, you must have been a broken-hearted young person at the time.
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The hallmark of good writing;
The hallmark of good writing; its reader discovering something new on each reading...as here, Bee. Heartbreaking, in its entirety.
Tina
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Hi Bee,
Hi Bee,
This was a lovely gentle story, each word in the beginning stanzas contributing to the feeling of protection and care. We are knew that there was going to be a bad ending for the little piece of life, and of course there was. Beautifully done.
Jean
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I remember the power of
I remember the power of emotions at that age, Bee. This was excellent.
Rich x
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You have real talent.
Why don't you write more about things happy and positive? It is not good to dwell so much
on the mistakes and misfortunes of the past it is not healthy. It makes one even more unhappy.
Keep on writing Bee! Tom
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