red booth
review
issue 11n |
Memoirs
of a Fleeting Summer
You say you’re back in America
Writing poetry under neon
signs and sleeping
In waffle-house parking
lots.
Funny that only now I should
remember that brief English summer –
Its short silk spun days
I have not been able to recall but now
I remember. I remember
our song of lament:
Together, trapped under
a ceiling of gray,
And worse, grey, spelt with
an e.
That summer I trudged the
steaming streets
(The Irish would call this
weather close, you said)
To a job on the tourists’
side of town,
Selling shoes and scarves
to ladies who rode the bus from Godstow,
Kiddlington, or any of those
places where they referred to Oxford as The City.
We sat nearly nude on the
too-green back lawn of your dormitory
Drinking cheap French and
watching the floating heads
Of tourists riding down
the Cherwell on meandering punts,
Their passing absurdly rhythmic,
like a log ride at Disneyland
(It’s a small world after
all, you laughed).
It was that summer that
the albino deer got loose from Magdalen Deer Park
And I wondered if she had
left feeling bad because she knew
She was different (– not
aloud, of course, for you would consider it vanity).
The Old Firehouse was putting
on Six Degrees so we went to a matinee
(How mercilessly we laughed
at the Brits’ version of New Yorkese!).
What a neat idea though
– that we are all six simple steps apart,
A Kandinsky symphony of
chaos -- six failing, faltering, stumbling steps
Apart.
When the show was over, we
emerged from the dark to find the sky
Split open like a ripe pomegranate,
the spell broken; the cage bars lifted. Suddenly
People filled the streets
in shorts and summer dresses and I, for one
Interminable terrifying
second, paused to consider that it was not the summer
Fleeting before me; it was
you, free and unfettered.
The clouds closed again like
thick velvet curtains and I
Took your arm as we walked
wobbly-ankled over cobblestones --
All the while winding back
home.
- Suzanne Rindell
Suzanne appeared
in RBR once before.
She was born on an Air Force
base in
New Mexico and grew up in the
foothills
of Northern California. Recent
and forthcoming poetry publications
include The Sulphur River
Literary
Review, Tule Review, and
the Bay Area Poets' Coalition PoeTalk.
|
|