Southport Days with Shirley
By Coolhermit
- 379 reads
[this is a long piece - forms a trilogy (part two has been posted here as a 'stand alone' and is popular as a performance piece) the whole thing is autobiographical]
Southport Days with Shirley
teenagers holding hands
sheltering from winter winds
waiting for the last bus,
to take Shirley home
hurry up... yet... don’t come yet
back-row cuddles at the Odeon
ignoring the movie action
Doris Day and Rock Hudson
watching Shirley staring at the screen
(her profile light, dark, light in the flickering)
and cupping the bicep I took for a breast
instead
aching to kiss but dreading missing
bunking out to beat the Anthem
racing Lord Street to the K. D.
she always beat me
unless I’d popped
a stack of Dexies
hot chocolate for Shirley -
with a buttered toast teacake -
nothing was too much for her
when I had the necessary –
black coffee for me
she was a good girl
sensible, reliable
I lived on the streets
pilfering and selling speed
leftover once I met my needs
I think I loved her
I think she loved me too
we planned to court properly;
first a flat, a job, a suit, polished shoes,
make myself presentable
for Sunday tea at her parents’ place
in Rufford, nr. Ormskirk,
Lancashire
we spent the occasional night together -
in a sea-front cheap hotel
(whenever Shirley could afford it)
did she enjoy the loving?
I cannot recall
I was usually high,
talking nonsense -
that I can recall
black bombers quickly wasted me
my blood turned septic,
teeth to cheese...
Shirley left me,
“I don’t want to read they found you dead in a gutter,”
on my way from town
heading back south
she sat at ‘our’ table – dead centre,
of the Kardomah window,
nibbling a ‘toasted’
next to her,
a bloke named Peter
he had a job
could afford to treat her
I spotted a creeping tear,
she waved - the merest flutter -
and blew a discreet kiss
under cover of wiping
a smear of butter
I waved, shrugged,
raised my arms, defeated
shot a wry smile
as I passed on
to start hitching
it was rumoured she was expecting,
I might be the father,
but it was the ‘swinging sixties’
such ‘details’ hardly mattered
when I was a mess
and Shirley wasn’t.
After 50 plus years of searching, and two days after writing that (as a class homework I had set) , I reconnected with Shirley - we chatted online and renewed our friendship -- we never met again.
I wrote “let’s dance” for her after she said she was diagnosed with stage four cancer.
It is a promise made knowing it would never be kept.
let’s dance
take my hand,
I promise we will dance
tangos, boleros,
wild fandangos
drink muscatel straight from the bottle
sing loud outrageous songs
with curtains wide and lights full on
through firefly jacaranda nights
make stabs at the lyrics of Bob Dylan classics,
I’ll crawl out the window acting like a diplomat
you in your leopard-skin pillbox hat
the spitting image of a Siamese cat
we’ll be having fun
freewheeling highway sixty one
it’s all right, Ma,
ignore the blood spots on the floor
it’s just my forehead bleedin’
from butt butt buttin’ on heaven’s door
we’ll revive forty-fives.
doo-wop backing Da doo Ron Ron,
and Dancing in the Street
cuddling up to Coltrane,
A Love Supreme
sweet and cool
on sultry summer nights
neighbours will mutter,
“they ought to know better,”
and shutter their ears
against our whooping
celebrating nothing left to lose
tuck your red dress in your Janet Regers
turn breathless cartwheels across the floor
make me seasick - make me yell for
More! More! More! More! More! More! More!
and we will be dancing
wild dervish dances
leaping, twisting,
banshee howling,
laughing
oh yes, my darling,
I promise you dancing
I promise you singing and drinking
laughter and loving and joy
I promise you
forever,
us
Then the inevitable news – how could I attend the funeral or her memorial?
I grieved alone.
Shirley died today
the long expected news still shocked
with family and loved ones at her bedside
and good humour and bravery
she gently slipped away
was the cancer biding its time
all those wet windy
nineteen sixties evenings
when we sheltered
on Marine Drive, Southport
waiting for the last bus
to take her home to Rufford
Nr Ormskirk, Lancashire?
she could not come home with me
I had no home
the upturned boat I sheltered under
did not have room for two
I did not know it then
but I was a lousy boyfriend
I did not know what boyfriends did
or girlfriends expected
so we parted
so it goes
I married another
fathered sons and daughters
but I never forgot her
Shirley was gentle, strong, compassionate,
oh and funny with an infectious giggle
she married another
that did not last
my marriage foundered too
that’s what marriages tend to do
Shirley gave birth to her babies
nurtured her children
wore a new hat every wedding
while I was, perhaps, a footnote in her life
a memory of a chaotic lad she briefly knew
tossed in the winds of drugs and crime
she meant far more to me
she was my first lover
the first to welcome me deep into her very self
I prayed when I was told she had died
asking god to make her welcome
in the place she did not believe in
I waited… in silence…waiting…listening
long minutes later I heard her voice,
“Ricky, it’s wonderful,”
I guess we’ll meet up again.
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Comments
A moving and touching poem
A moving and touching poem expressive of your feelings for Shirley.
Jenny.
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