BENEDICT AT MATINS.A Poem by Terry CollettA YOUNG MAN AWAITS THE START OF MATINS AT AN ABBEY RECALLING A YOUNG GIRL WHO WANTED HIM.
Benedict stands
in the porter's lodge, circa 1969, waiting for Dom Tyler the monk, to bring the large key to open the church for Matins. Dawn, cold air, smell of age and incense and baking of bread. He remembers Sonia, the domestic at the home, who pushed him to the bed of old Mr Gillam and said in her soft Italian, Potrei fare sesso con te qui, then in her broken English said, I could have sex with you here. Another joined Benedict in the porter’s lodge, some holy-Joe type, breviary under arm, starved gaze. The silence, the smell, the chill. Dom Tyler opens the door from the cloister and rattles the key, smiles, but does not break the Grand Silence. He takes them out into the morning air, opens up the church. Lights are on, monks are assembling, bell rings, Benedict takes a seat on the side pew, the other sits more in front. The old monk who last time talked to Benedict of monastic life, slides by, his body aged, his habit like a shroud. How he escaped Sonia, how he managed to get away unmolested, he finds it hard to fathom, except the promise of the cinema, the seats at the back, the kisses and touching, all in the dark, the flashing images of the film going on. Potrei fare sesso con te qui, he utters under-breath. The Latin of early morning Matins begins, he dismisses her image and her words. The holy-Joe opens his breviary in the semi dark, his finger turning pages, muttering, his head nodding to an invisible prayer. Benedict imagines Sonia creeping into the pew, muttering Italian, sitting there. © 2013 Terry Collett |
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Added on June 2, 2013 Last Updated on June 2, 2013 Tags: UOPING MAN, 1969, MONKS, GIRL, MATINS 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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