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Friday, 3 August 2018

Looking Up


Looking Up

We waited for you to come and join us on the lawn
The tea cooling in the pot
And David said he thought he’d seen you
Climbing the back stair-case
Not long before we had come out

And mother made some remark about the wayward rambling roses
Casting gloomy shadows over the dining-room windows
Pattering against the glass, making it seem so much darker
They needed severely cutting back
And she would speak to Jenson
When next she saw him

Then David said suddenly that he could see you at last
And we turned around to look
The chairs creaking gently
And spotted you high above the gallery, walking towards the round tower
Patterned by its cloaking ivy-tendrils climbing
And the white signals of your dress
Flashed between the crenellations of sandy-coloured stone
And so we called out to you and waved hello

The house was looking at its best
Hazel-growth softening the harsher edges
And we admired the summer blooms
The grass yielding springy under our feet
And we called out to you again
While David talked about the wedding
Busy with arrangements
His face shining with happiness

We must have looked so small to you
Dolls or puppets on the lawn acting out some domestic scene
Within the grand setting
As you regarded us below
From your parapet-high vantage-point
Staring down at us from above

And the breeze caught your hair, made it float serene
Your eyes calm and steady as if taking in the view
Your face cool-composed, your arms held high aloft
A mumbled prayer perhaps at the very moment
When we all looked up once more
And watched you step out
Into thin air

Copyright Andy Fawthrop 2018

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