Women of Small Histories (I.P.)
By Silver Spun Sand
- 2788 reads
The year is nineteen-forty-seven...
it is summer – one of the hottest
on record. Round about midday,
and a storm threatens. The sound
of distant thunder, perhaps,
rumbles down the chimney...
a cat, maybe, sits on the hearth
and the air is as thick as the piecrust
baking in the black-leaded stove.
My mother, and hers, are sitting
round the kitchen table. It is
Monday...this is the day for cold meat
and apple-pie; each week the same.
Both of them kitted out in pinnies –
hair tied up in a scarf...it’s washing day
and there’s a blow on in the yard.
The Corona Man – cart and dray,
knocks on the door; Gran, as ever,
as always, buys three lemonades.
The clock on the dresser strikes
twelve – a Westminster chime;
I can almost hear it. The rent man
calls, and the pig-bin’s been collected
and Roger the St. Bernard’s been round
for his usual bone from the Sunday roast.
Until now it’s been an unsurprising day –
and then my mother’s pains begin,
and all this while I’ve been sleeping
in the folds of the wind that inhabits
the sheets, hanging on the line.
The gin and cold bath hadn’t worked –
and knitting needles, sure not all
they’re cracked up to be.
A crying shame – the extraordinary
becomes the mundane; a child is born –
a new life is created, and to them
all it means is another mouth to feed,
in deepest, darkest Deptford; namely
Drakes Buildings. So, from now on,
I go it alone in the world, with no thanks
owed to women such as these, who view
the whole damned, wonderful shebang
as nothing more than merely marking time
in the mad march of days.
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Comments
Interesting read with a good
Interesting read with a good flow.
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The picture of the 1947 scene
The picture of the 1947 scene is very good (including drey).
But I don't think your life has likely been mundane! though I guess all life is a mixture of the mundane and the extraordinary, really. I was a bit worried by the reference to knitting needles. Rhiannon
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Tina you have written a first
Tina you have written a first-class poem. And a poem that for me explains a big part of what ABCtales is about, which is the opportunity for us ordinary folks to get out what is in us online. Our experience and our story which of course includes that of the people who are a big part of our lives. 'Our toils obscure an a' that' as Burns said.
The in-house detail is very well drawn 'cold meat and apple pies, pinnies,' grans regular treat of fizzy lemon. 'and then 'a new life is created.' Yes! Elsie
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Hi Tina, I sometimes find it
Hi Tina, I sometimes find it hard to say what's in my heart when reading your poetry. This poem touched me, because you write so well of the time and place, but then there is such a sadness in the last two stanzas, which you describe with such feeling. Again I have so much respect for your writing. Jenny.
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Hello Tina,
Hello Tina,
I had no trouble understanding this one. You created a wonderful image of home life but then you hit us with the gin and cold baths, and knitting needles which shatters our expectations. I thought this was extremely well written.
Moya
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