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Three poems by Robert Kemp
Coach loads at the theatre outing: Best clothes, best hair – from Mitcham, mainly. With hearing aids and teeth and sticks They struggle to their seats, abuzz. With what? Not expectation but the recent past: ‘So I said . . . and she goes . . . and, really, ‘You wouldn’t believe it but it turns out . . .’ Right into and beyond the overture.
These were all once Sally Bowles Shocking Mum with married men, Smoking, drinking . . . trying stuff . . . Joyful, eager, young, alive, Breathless, bright and ever free To make not just receive the day.
Now, tragically, like all the others They’ve turned into their Mitcham mothers.
They wonder should they die or stay alive. The meat of life is largely gone and now The bones remain to make use of – but how?
Play golf, eat too much, do what has been done. For me all this but also so much more: To try whatever’s not been tried before.
Whatever comes I’ll take and shake it well. Each freshly minted day is mine to use – I hope I’m cursed with options hard to choose.
Who just can’t wait to see what life may bring.
Who’s yet to learn what life can really mean.
Grown up, to show no disregard Each year we both receive and send One birthday and one Christmas card. |