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A poem about a lady on a train offering to return a forgotten umbrella to a commuter |
It was the 7:26, not my normal train, You all crammed on at Watford / Bushey / Harrow And more with each stop; I didn't look up Let alone get up, in case my seating loss Became another banker's arse's gain. You were pregnant. I know that now But honestly I wasn't sure at first. And though unmoving rudeness is poor form Accusations false have proven to be worse. A few stops further on of sweating human crush We stopped (at Shepherd's Bush?), and somewhere far away A flicker registered on seismic charts: Tectonic plates of people strained for their depart. "Wait!" you called as punters grinded past; They slowed just for a second, didn't dare engage With you, a crazy yeller Waving an umbrella. I saw its owner. He looked at you a little longer than the rest, But off the train already there's no way For him to fight back on, and anyway The queues behind the ticket gates were growing He glanced at the umbrella knowing Price of everything, value of nothing: He could get another from his company So barely broke his stride. And then I looked and saw your eyes Pleading with a base intensity As if the umbrella's the way Of saving its now former owner from his destiny. I won't forget those livid green and shining eyes. Umbrella Prophet waving your stone tablet But finding no belief with London Midland's heathens. When you sat down something within those eyes Had not quite died, but had been put away. You had joined us. You sat in silence all the rest of the way. I turned back to my kindle And glowered at the liquid crystal. |