11 Months In London Poem by Tony Walton

11 Months In London



As I turn left off Oxford Street
cloaked in a low sky and shuffling
along with the other furrowed brows

I search for the accents of my youth
"Tomato" or "Tomahto" or "Tomata."
"Aunt" or "Ant" or "Auntie"

Punching my cold fists into a
Harrods jacket I enter the tube,

shortly reaching a grey gray
station and see the pub with an
old fashioned clock against the
familiar liquored mirror,

damn, it's way past our meeting time,
and
am I at the right place?

I really could go for
comfort food now, we need this

Connection

"Buffalo Wings? " Or is it "Fish and Chips? "
Maybe "Saltfish? "

Which of these do I want?
Eh, it's too late for such a search.

A sudden hiss of wind
angrily flaps my jacket, and
a raindrop

taps my shoulder—
as a stranger does when they have
wandered too far and need
direction.

The rain falls.
The sun falls.
The fog falls.
The days fall from the harboring arms of mothers.

I walk alongside the parceled flats,
pausing at a low bridge and look out at
the bruised dusk of the Old World
as the wind swings my bag like a beacon
against the cold.
Oh, come now - and dance with me
Caribbean.

11 Months In London
Saturday, March 15, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: love
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Tony Walton 16 March 2014

Thanks Nika - glad it's not opaque (not a fan of opaque :) Best, Tony

0 0 Reply
Nika Mcguin 16 March 2014

This is interesting. I guess this is what it feels like to move away where there are different accents and different delicacies, different spellings and the like. It's trying to find yourself as you're lost between new experiences and old experiences, new preferences vs. old preferences. Being lost trying to figure it all out, possibly being lost directions wise too lol. Anyhow, thanks to this poem I was able to live that vicariously. So thanks for posting ^-^ ~Nika

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