Two Bedrooms and a Bath
Most of the spare room houses book shelves and a desk
but they keep a small bed against the wall
in case someone might decide to visit: stay the night--
perhaps a family member.
They take turns in the bathroom. She goes first
while he checks the locks, switches off the lights out front,
drinks a glass of water with his bp pills.
They quietly undress in their darkened room,
there is only tenderness in the way they hold
one another's hands entwining fingers between them
on the bed they share, waiting for sleep to come.
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Two bedrooms and a bath
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
An enjoyable read. Nice writing. Engaging. Gentle. The prosaic writ profound.
Just something about that second last line that doesn't read right to me.
Just something about that second last line that doesn't read right to me.
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
Linda
I did enjoy this but do think it needs some paring. For example in the first line I do think that it would be enough to write
the spare room houses shelves and a desk,
a bed they keep against the wall
in case a family member stays the night.
As examples. This a sweet scene but it does not need all the words to make it poignant.
IMO
Dave
I did enjoy this but do think it needs some paring. For example in the first line I do think that it would be enough to write
the spare room houses shelves and a desk,
a bed they keep against the wall
in case a family member stays the night.
As examples. This a sweet scene but it does not need all the words to make it poignant.
IMO
Dave
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
I like this too Linda. There is a fragility in their solitude that is touching. The pacing of the writing worked for me, the delivery pitched to a life of slowtime.
I like the connection there, a togetherness...perhaps in sleeplessness, perhaps this is the last gesture of physical contact, perhaps facing that final sleep as one. An echo of Larkin's poem:
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/ ... undel-tomb
what are bp pills?
best
Phil
one another's hands entwining fingers between them
on the bed they share, waiting for sleep to come.
I like the connection there, a togetherness...perhaps in sleeplessness, perhaps this is the last gesture of physical contact, perhaps facing that final sleep as one. An echo of Larkin's poem:
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/ ... undel-tomb
what are bp pills?
best
Phil
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
I liked it very much, esp. " one another's hands entwining fingers between them"
An older couple in a small house that collected a lifetime of stuff...
An older couple in a small house that collected a lifetime of stuff...
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
bp pills = blood pressure pills
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
Thank you everyone who read and commented on this poem.
Every afternoon, Nicole Wallace, on her show "Deadline Whitehouse" commemorates the lives of one or two people who died from Covid . She told of a couple, married over 60 years, who led full and giving lives, were hospitalized together. They died within minutes of one another. I didn't want to write about covid specifically. Yeah it can use some work but it will take me a while to get back to it.
Every afternoon, Nicole Wallace, on her show "Deadline Whitehouse" commemorates the lives of one or two people who died from Covid . She told of a couple, married over 60 years, who led full and giving lives, were hospitalized together. They died within minutes of one another. I didn't want to write about covid specifically. Yeah it can use some work but it will take me a while to get back to it.
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
indar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 13, 2020 8:57 amThank you everyone who read and commented on this poem.
Every afternoon, Nicole Wallace, on her show "Deadline Whitehouse" commemorates the lives of one or two people who died from Covid . She told of a couple, married over 60 years, who led full and giving lives, were hospitalized together. They died within minutes of one another. I didn't want to write about covid specifically. Yeah it can use some work but it will take me a while to get back to it.
Such a sad/powerful story in and of itself. Perhaps an epigraph or dedication?
Re: Two bedrooms and a bath
How appropriate to their mutual lifetime that they should pass together. A heartfelt tribute, Linda.