BOX OF TRICKS 1967A Poem by Terry CollettA BOY AND GIRL MEET IN LONDON IN 1967Standing on Westminster Bridge with Nima I sense she is in a bad mood: her features betray it, her senses send out signals. What sort of week have you had? I ask. Awful without you; I wish you lived nearer so I could see you everyday rather than just weekends; that place is driving me mad, Nima says, turning to look at me. I can't come in the week, I work and by the time I finish work and get a train up here it would be so late, I say. I know, but I just get so frustrated at the hospital; and then Mother came and gave me a lecture and put me in an even worse mood, Nima says, looking back at the Thames below where barges and small boats and the occasional ship pass by. Do you believe in God? She asks me suddenly staring at me again. Yes of course, I say. Why of course, she says, I don't I think its just mumbo-jumbo. Buses and cars pass by us behind on the road; people walk past on the pavement over the Bridge. Then the whole universe has no purpose, I say, it is all one big pointless circus without God, I say, looking at the Thames flowing. How comes it's pointless? She says, I wish you'd tell my mother that and maybe then she'd get off my back. Without God there is no real purpose to anything; it is all chance and a roll of a dice in black space, I say. Can we not talk about God; I feel depressed enough as it is, she says, I want a drink and something to eat and a bunk up, she adds, taking hold of my hand in hers. What here? I say. No, she splutters laughing, in the Leicester Square or somewhere. What sex too? I say. That will be postponed until we can get a room one weekend, she says, becoming serious again. Big Ben tolls and I look at my watch: it is 1pm. All right let's go then you and I and have a bite to eat and a drink to drink, I say. So we walk off the Bridge, walk up Whitehall and she talks of her mother and the doctors and nurses and wanting a fix. I tell her about my week and work and the whole box of tricks. © 2016 Terry Collett |
StatsAuthorTerry 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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