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November 1, 2015
‘I could have loved him,
I really could’, she said to me
when the funeral over;
too late to turn back the clock.
‘It could have been so different,
it really could’, she said to me;
though the words meant for herself,
as if to berate – her anger to unlock.
‘I was a fool to myself,
I really was’, she said to me;
as if I didn’t know, her first love,
she’d mentally never let go.
‘I’ve seen your heart breaking,
I really have’, I said to her;
knowing that private part of her mind,
that still filled her with woe.
‘I really loved him,
I really did’, she said to me
now it mattered not;
the one in the way, in that bond of three.
‘I could have had him,
I really could’, she said to me,
‘but he wasn’t free, and the guilt too much,
so I declined his plea’.
I often think I’ll find him,
I really do, I say to myself,
when curiosity calls;
I feel I already know him, after all.
I wonder if he’s still alive,
I really do, I muse to myself.
That guy who wrecked our lives;
his presence an irritant, a shadow tall.
‘You shouldn’t have told me,
you really shouldn’t’, I said to her’
‘I love you both equally;
it just wasn’t fair’.
‘It made me think you’d wished
I wasn’t here’, I said to her,
‘and like the one you chose,
we both lived in despair’.
‘I know you told him,
I really do’, she said to me.
Aghast, I denied it; ‘I would never hurt
the one who loved you, so true,
who scratched his head
but stuck by you,
through good times and bad,
never having a clue’.
Then ten years passed with no mention,
of her war-time soldier at all !
Happy times in her marriage,
instead she chose to recall !
It seems a lifetime away
now I sit here and recall.
One forever oblivious: One a shadow tall;
and the one we all loved – our very own screwball.
By Harriet Blackbury.
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