(for Peter Ruppell)
You wrote such a love poem that I was
dumb-founded & left to scratch the sand
Alone in the surf I couldn-t join the bait-diggers
I-d left my fork and bucket at home
& I am not rough by nature
You were sitting on top of a boulder deep in the forest
It was taller than a man & surrounded by pine trees
I think there are pine trees on Fire Island
but I-ve never been to Fire Island, though
I can imagine & we all know what could happen
there, but. . . . . . .
& the world that started in a parked car
was really a fearful one - It would only lead
from one confusion to another
& I couldn-t do this to you on the giant highway
She was a reason in herself, & women need
the menace of ambiguity in their actions
so one action might well signify the opposite
- an act of sacrifice really the act of killing & revenge -
& this much was true
The exercise book was green & the distance
saved much embarrassment though you were
in many ways ignorant of this
I still can-t find my bucket & bait-fork
but this is only an excuse
The Seaside
Lee Harwood
(1)
Poem topics: I love you, alone, car, green, home, nature, never, women, world, fearful, deep, confusion, excuse, true, book, reason, ignorant, happen, imagine, action, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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The Seaside is a poem by Lee Harwood. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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