HER SHINING KNIGHT.A Poem by Terry CollettA BOY AND GIRL IN 1950S LONDON AND KNIGHTS AND SWORD FIGHTS AND MAID MARIAN AND SUCH.![]() You walked back from the shops through the Square having shopped for your mother Helen beside you helping to carry the heavy bags her doll Battered Betty in her free hand Helen dressed in her dark blue raincoat and hood her thick lens spectacles smeared by the light rain her brown shoes letting in water you in your black raincoat buttoned up to the neck your black shoes treading through puddles you climbed the stairs to your flat on the fourth floor and along the balcony and went in through the front door and put the shopping bags on the kitchen floor you look like drowned rats your mother said best get out of those wet coats or you'll catch your deaths and so you took off the raincoats and she gave you a towel each to dry off in front of the living room fire Helen took off her spectacles and wiped them on the hem of her green flowered dress I must look a mess she said the boys at school call me Dracula's sister they can say what they like you said to me you're my Maid Marian to my Robin Hood besides they couldn't understand beauty if it crept up and pinch their bums she laughed and wiped her frizzy dark brown hair on the white towel you dried your hair and face and took in her lost girl look her spectacles on the dinning room table her hair all over the place her squinting eyes I can take you to the cinema if you like this afternoon you said there's a Cavalier and Roundheads film on with plenty of sword fights I'll have to ask my mum Helen said I expect she'll say yes especially if I'm going with you I think she'd trying to me marry me off with you even if we're only 8 she rubbed her hair quickly then put the towel on the chair with yours Battered Betty her doll was sitting on the floor by the fire place looking sorry for herself Helen picked the doll up in her arms and you both looked out the window at the coal wharf across the road and the lorries and horse drawn coal carts coming and going when we're married Helen said we can live in a castle and look out from the battlements over the countryside and I can have pretty girls and you can train our sons to be knights yes you said and ride horses and have sword fights with the bad knights and you showed her the blue bladed sword your old man made for you at his workplace and you showed her your sword fighting skills afterwards she said I best get home or mum will wonder where I've got to ok you said let me know if you can go to the cinema and tell your mum I've got the money for tickets and an ice cream ok she said and put on her still damp raincoat and kissed your cheek wetly and went out and off along the balcony and down the stairs (the rain had stopped) and you watched her go through the Square and down the slope and out of sight she your Maid Marian you her shining knight. © 2013 Terry Collett |
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Added on October 15, 2013 Last Updated on October 15, 2013 AuthorTerry CollettUnited KingdomAboutTerry Collett has been writing since 1971 and published on and off since 1972. He has written poems, plays, and short stories. He is married with eight children and eight grandchildren. on January 27t.. more.. |


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