A poem about atonement. |
Night after night You show up- Beautiful nightmare, Looking the same as years before. I remember How we used to sit Around on your bed In that dumpy house You had, unkempt But tidy and old And drafty. At night we would have to curl Up close during that cold, Cold Winter when everything Froze and you would cling So close that the heat Became unbearable And I never moved. During the day I read You Tropic of Cancer And you giggled At the frankness Of Miller and we lost Ourselves in each Others eyes Yours so close to mine, Mine so close to yours, Reflections casting shadows Across our brains, Yours imprinted on mine, Mine imprinted on yours. Long ago, when you were a girl, Someone did awful Things to you And you would never tell me exactly what, only that it was horrible, Unnatural, Disgusting, Unforgivable. One night you cried While we were making love And I didn’t know why, But the next day You just said, “ you don’t know anything about women” and never told me why you cried and I still don’t know, or maybe I do. You were always convivial In a crowd, Vivacious Spontaneous Often loud And a delight Because I’m so shy. In the mornings you would shine, And in the evenings shine Again, but underneath that light Was a scared little girl. You phoned one night crying, Despondent, Desperate, Frightened, Your living room was sprawled With papers and you were crying Because you had finals, Because you couldn’t think, You really didn’t know why you were crying. I was in love with being in love, And I watched while you fought And fought with those demons, Nameless and senseless, And I couldn’t lend you my hand; I was afraid. So now, long after the affair, You haunt me beautiful Nightmare girl With eyes like emeralds That lights the dwarves mines, and long flowing brown hair the color of dried earth reminding me again and again of everything I didn’t do. |