The Old House By The Sea
By Kilb50
- 3278 reads
I did not want the haughty woman dressed in yellow
to buy the old house by the sea.
Her peony hands measuring the walls,
her partner finding space for Toby jugs and imported skins,
reduced me to a secret onlooker
observing a once great city awaiting its plunder.
Oh no. The old house was not for them.
We shared too many precious moments
for someone to paper so completely.
Those last nights I spent alone – everything
shipped north or sheeted down -
I discovered our initials engraved
in the plaster of the once bricked-up flue,
a prank we played one rainy afternoon
to immortalise our love.
I stroked each letter, re-imagined the deep grooves
as beauteous scars of love,
felt grains of dry cement fill my nails.
I must have pressed too hard because old
plaster came loose, fell away, shattering
dusty fragments at my feet, revealing not only
dull brick but the initials of other lovers far removed:
LK & MM; AS and Percival – the last encased
in a floral heart.
Like us they once lay here, heard calm swell
turn to rage, thought love was ever-constant
forgetting it cracks and chafes, falls to end.
So when the young couple came to build
a new life I knew the old house was for them.
She slightly taller, he temperate and loyal -
no longer a distant onlooker, no longer a city
ripe for plunder -
their hesitant laughter breathed life into silent, empty rooms.
In time the heat of the flue and
the cold of the cellar will flake our memories to dust.
Let these lovers rest a while
and warm themselves.
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Comments
Like a warm sweet nostalgic
Like a warm sweet nostalgic hug. A beautiful journey from envy to satisfaction and wistful maturity.
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This is beautifully done. The
This is beautifully done. The letting go of.. and the moving on from.
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Love's rarely permanent and
Love's rarely permanent and it shape shifts - this poem nails that through memory and the structures of the house - fragility, repair, age, youth. It's such a beautiful piece.
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I really liked the detail
of the lovers initials and the sadness they invoke and the hope for the future in the final stanza. This piece tells a long story within four short verses.
Excellent.
Ed Crane
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You draw a picture of you and
You draw a picture of you and the house delighting in gentle and genuine love. Rhiannon
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