I
was his little girl;
I
was his laughter, speaking
‘Lily
of the Lavvie’ before
I
knew I meant ‘Valley’;
I
was his laughter,
Insisting
on my ‘Lizzie Hat’,
Calling
my doll ‘Gaitey’,
Imitating
foghorns,
Saying
‘gongits’, my sister’s word
For
iron-work on roof corners.
His
words were laughter, too:
He
called sleet ‘snizzle’, how
Easy
to mix snow and drizzle
When
English is new.
We
stored, stirred, reconstituted laughter:
Often
remembered the man
Who
skiddled down Winder,
Sliding
the scree, flailing,
Raising
his hat as he racketed past,
Pretending
all was well!
He
let laughter explode through
His
whisper, let it ambush us:
‘Let’s
wait!” he said, and how
We
relished shared naughtiness
When
the show-off lady plunked off the weir
Stilettos
flying, her yellow blouse and
Vermilion
skirt billowing, bouffant,
Like
pirate sails in the Rawthey!
I
was his little girl, his laughter,
So
when I lost the kite he made,
When
I flew it alone In disobedience,
When
it snagged a tree-top,
When
it flailed and flapped
Like
seagull wings stricken In wire,
I was afraid to tell.
And
three days after the kite
Died
impaled, shreds blowing
And
blinking from summer sun,
I
came down for breakfast
When
I knew he’d gone to work,
When
I knew disappointment
Had
walked out the door.
And
then I saw a new-built kite.
It
stood sharp and shiny,
As
white and red and ribboned
As
a Polish flag, and I knew
I
was still his laughter,
Still his little girl.
6 comments:
Irena I wish I could write so beautifully about my parents. This is one of the loveliest of your poems - such a wonderful description of love.
Thankyou so much Liz 😍😍😍 I'm chuffed you think it's one of my best .
And don't forget, I can't write the way you do either! I read yesterday, "To write is to be brave." We all are brave! And no one can write as each of us do 😊😊😊
This is very beautiful and captures a moment of childhood so well
I really like this one!
Thankyou so very much Ann 😊
So glad you like this Suzie 😍
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