MARY AND THE OLD PRIEST.A Poem by Terry CollettA GIRL AND AN OLD PRIEST IN EIRE IN 1960SThe old priest sat in the dark of the confessional. A girl had entered on the other side and knelt. A rustle of clothing, breathing, a cough. He was prepared for the list of sins, the the soft voice verbal sprouting, the usual schoolgirl misdemeanours. Yes my child? He said. Mary on the other side stared at the grille, tried to make out which was the priest. Bless me Father she began, then the list ran. The priest placed his hands over his ears. The list was long, indelicate, touching on the obscene. He fumbled with his beads, tried to make out the voice, the owner, which girl? He thought, peering into the grille, his eyes searching through the semi dark. Mary pushed her knees together; she sensed the need to pee. She knelt holding herself in, pushed her hands between thighs. How long was the old codger going to be? She mused. The priest coughed. Sniffed, tried to discover the scent. He said the usual words, about trying to avoid the occasion of sin, have faith, and so forth uttered in a strained voice. He peered hard. The outlined figure fidgeted, moved from side to side. Never in his born days had he. He uttered the absolution, made a sign of the cross. Then she was gone. The light there then not there. A smell of sin? What was it? No, not urine? © 2012 Terry Collett |
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Added on November 18, 2012 Last Updated on November 18, 2012 Tags: GIRTL, PRIEST, EIRE, 196OS, CONFESSION AuthorTerry CollettUnited KingdomAboutTerry Collett has been writing since 1971 and published on and off since 1972. He has written poems, plays, and short stories. He is married with eight children and eight grandchildren. on January 27t.. more..Writing
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