My Life in Words
2. Youth
Life was the truck I fell under at 12,
watching the massive tyres
travel inexorably over my leg;
moving my head back out of the way
just in time – damage, but not annihilation.
It was that unit, my parents, cracking (like my shin).
My scars were from being uprooted,
transplanted far from the enchanted island
into a desert. Monster stepmother –
mad, drunken, jealous – persecuted me
and tortured my little brother,
whom I failed to protect. 'But,' I tell myself,
'I was only 15.' He was 11.
The adored father proved weak.
The mother and loving stepfather,
back on the island, couldn't believe;
staged no rescue. But at least
we had holidays there: respite.
My brother, now 73, still can't talk about it.
After two years we got away
to the Big City which folded us in, becoming
our dear home town for decades.
University for me, and later for him
(meanwhile new school – our father
did that much, seeing by then it was crucial).
And our new home in a safe suburb
with my favourite uncle and aunty.
Her big smile, her welcoming arms.
I walked straight into them
forever, my 'second mother'.
Later the women's hostel in the city,
then independence: a shared house close to Uni.
Finding again the stepsister who,
hating her mother, was always my friend.
Study, study, study, no money.
But when I went home for holidays
back to the island, I was now the glamorous
out-of-towner (mainlander). That was good.
These drafts (under this title) are turning out much longer and prosier than I had anticipated! Perhaps what I'm really doing is creating the skeleton of the prose memoir I've been struggling with.
harrowing, Rosemary.
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ReplyDeleteWow, to everything! And your brilliantly understated, 'That was good.' is a great way to end the poem. What about two narrative poems instead of one, above, Rosemary? Actually, you have even more poems in those stanzas.
ReplyDeleteyou have lots of stories here burrowing under the surface
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments. Yes, that is proving the problem with this series. I've got too much material to fit easily into the few short poems I envisaged. I could separate the details into more poems, but I think I really need to turn the ones I have into book-length prose.
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