Strange MeetingA Poem by David Lewis PagetI
saw him leaving the local bar Under
the street light glare, And
something about the way he walked Turned
my head, to stare, He
shuffled off with his shoulders slumped And
he dragged his feet in the rain, His
aura under the lamp was black, All
it gave out was pain. The
street was strangely familiar, I
heard him mutter and curse, I
followed him at a walking pace I
hadn’t been there for years, He
paused in front of an iron gate, And
there, stood under a tree Was
the girl who’d broken my heart when I Was
barely twenty-three. I
held my breath for a moment there My
heart had skipped a beat, I
pushed down hard on my walking stick And
I stopped there, in the street, She
stared at him with a haughty smile And
she said, ‘I told you, No!’ Just
as she’d said those words to me, Fifty
years ago. He
kicked the gate and he walked right in Just
as I’d done back then, ‘How
can you say our love is lost, Have
you been with other men?’ I
knew the answer would be the same As
she’d uttered long ago, The
words were burnt on my fevered brain, ‘I
said, you have to go!’ ‘Doesn’t
it mean a thing to you, How
can you be so cruel? Tell
me the truth, I know his name You
treat me like a fool!’ ‘My
life has nothing to do with you Those
days are done and gone, I’m
looking out for my future now, The
past is past, and done!’ He
shook his head and he backed away The
tears welled in his eyes, ‘I’ll
always love you,’ I heard him say And
I thought, ‘that wasn’t wise!’ I
should have walked with a jaunty air But
in youth, we show our pain, Not
keep it buried beneath the years Like
an ever spreading stain. I
faced him as he came out the gate, ‘Forget
her son, that’s best, Or
she’ll keep running on back to you And
she’ll give you little rest. Whenever
her life is down, she’ll cry Bemoan
her petty fate, Then
go and marry a banker, but For
you, it’s much too late.’ He
looked at me as he slammed the gate And
he pulled up, rather quick, I
vaguely remembered a man out there A
man with a walking stick, He
looked so old and he rambled, and I
listened impatiently, And
said, ‘What do you want, old man, You’ve
nothing to do with me!’ David
Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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