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Poetry from within
   

The old woman


She was old, possibly Jewish

I was young and not

‘Its cold,’ she was rather shrewish

I replied ‘I’m hot.’



This had gone on for some time when

Looking rather strange,

She sat me down and called me Ben

Asked me to arrange,



For me and Steve to visit her

Though she called him Phil,

What time and day would we prefer?

Would we eat a grill?



‘Must go’ she said and eyed the clock

‘Jakob will be back

Tired, hungry. I wont hear his knock

Where’d I leave my mac.’



We both smiled, looked at each other

‘Jewish then’ he said

Clucking round you like your mother

Seeing that your fed.



We duly turned up on the date,

Head cocked round the door

‘I thought it was Jakob, he’s late’

And behind her the polished floor.



‘Please do come in, do have a seat’

Then she brought some tea.

Kitchen aromas, roasting meat

All for Steve and me?



For even then I surely knew

That jakob wasn’t here,

Why I had thought that to be true

I’d no idea.



She brought the meal roast beef l, orange

And all the trimmings

A combination very strange

And no way slimming.



But slim she was, and smartly dressed

Long sleeved cocktail frock,

Dove grey marled silk, made to impress

Shoes of dove grey croc.



I was twenty then, she was old

Probably fifty,

Quite handsome if the truth be told

Petite in court heels.



She cleared the table, went to check

If Jakob was here,

Returning brought the coffee back

Then it all was clear.



Leaning forward stretching to pour

Her sleeve rose a little,

On her arm crudely, red and raw

Poorly drawn, a petal.



Quite mad you see, as a hatter,

she spotted my glance

Laughed and saying ‘what’s the matter’

Did a little dance.



‘It was tattooed a week ago

When sure you would come,

It hurt and he was very slow

Had to have it done.’



‘There used to be a number there

Too embarrassing

Now that I have young friends, you pair

When we go dancing.’



‘I love to waltz,’ she glided round

Glided round the room,

Laughing like a bright young thing. Sounds

of madness and doom



For this took place in sixty two

She was clearly mad,

And we had encouraged her, so

Feeling rather sad.



We left that night we didn’t talk.

What was there to say,

Steve took the tube, I had to walk.

To review the day.



A crime committed years ago

Echoes on and on,

In a small flat in Pimlico

Her memory shone.



Beyond the things unspeakable

To the life she had.

And although twas predictable

The thought made her glad.



Of a young husband and children,

A home of their own

Flowers, hammocks, in the garden

Greeting guests, Shallom.



But this was not, could never be

As the tanks rolled on

The life she’d led, Gentility.

Taste, wit, now all gone.



Instead deserted by her friends

Grief and hell to come,

She was unable to defend

Her new infant son.



The child was thrown onto a train

Heedless of its age

She never saw either again

Jakob or the babe.



I’ll not go to see her again

It hurt far to much,

For she is now beyond the pain

Me it newly touched.

© 2010

John Cox