I came this |~| close
to finding love this morning.
At the café a youngish woman
pecked away at her laptop.
When I looked at her
she gave me a smile
that was open on all sides.
“Where did you get that smile?”
I asked, one of my standard lines.
“I stole it!” she said.
The conversation proceeded
easily, comfortably until at last
I arrived at the question:
“Do you have a boyfriend?”
“Yes,” she answered
with a slight blush.
Later, I imagined them making love
and wondered, Does she give him
anywhere near as much pleasure
as she gave me those few minutes we chatted,
smiling.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." Gandhi
I haven't kept up with them all Prince, but this last one is very elegantly done. Really captures a moment.
LET THERE BE LIGHT
"Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena
My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/
Nice idea PrinceMyshkin.
"an artist never really finishes his work, he merely abandons it." paul valery
You're making me want shhhheeexxxx
is it your intention?
"...she gave me a smile
that was open on all sides..."
I wonder what association that has.
I enjoyed it very much!
Assuming I understand correctly what "shhhheeexxxx" is, yeah, that was exactly my intention. And from now on, anytime I mention eggplant or sauerkraut or a whole lot of other things, you will think of "shhhheeexxxx," as in this well-known song:
Shhhheeexxxx is bustin' out all over!
The saplin's are bustin' out with sap!
Love hes found my brother, Junior,
And my sister's even loonier!
And my Ma is gettin' kittenish with Pap!
Sheeexxx in bustin' out all over
Because it's Shhhheeexxxx... Shhhheeexxxx, Shhhheeexxxx, Shhhheeexxxx
Just because it's Shhhheeexxxx, Shhhheeexxxx, Shhhheeexxxx!
Shhhheeexxxx is bustin' out all over
The ocean is full of Jacks and Jills,
With the little tail a-swishing'
Ev'ry lady fish is wishin'
That a male would come
And grab 'er by the gills!
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." Gandhi
Breakfast at "Beauty's"
A mother and her two young adult daughters
visiting from New Brunswick,
the young women oooh! and ahhh!
at everything in this historic ‘luncheonette.’
“Bagels!” Sesame-seed bagels
among bona-fide Montrealers
on rue Mont-Royal corner avenue du St. Urbain!
Last edited by PrinceMyshkin; 05-16-2008 at 03:26 PM.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." Gandhi
Marie
She might have been a young-looking 35.
I’d have preferred that
although, even at that age...
And there was something so quiet about her face
I almost found it forbidding.
Still, when she went outside for a cigarette
I followed her with my American Spirits
and asked if I might join her
for the length of a smoke.
She made place for me
on the concrete step
of the building next to the café
and I sat down and lit up.
We exchanged little pellets of conversation,
the sort that might have been the prelude
to anything
or nothing
then she re-entered the café to finish her lunch
and I moved over to one of the outdoor tables.
Soon after that she emerged,
nodded at the other chair and asked
if she might join me.
Of course, I said, hoping for no more
than a few minutes more pleasant conversation
or love at last.
When she left to go back to work
we embraced and, Quebec-style,
kissed each other on each cheek
and promised to look for each other there
some other time.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." Gandhi
Two moments in time and you manage to make a movie I will have in my head all day if not longer.
And this...
is the width and depth of it all.Of course, I said, hoping for no more
than a few minutes more pleasant conversation
or love at last.
I loved all of this, every line, every word. I was right there in the cafe and on the step, watching it all unfold, but especially this....
....which nudged me (quietly) off my chair with its open, naked honesty, and made me want to weep (quietly) for more. More poetry, and more than conversation.
*
"Courage is not the absence of fear but the judgment that something else is more important than fear." -- Ambrose Redmoon
CR: Madame Bovary, by Gustave Flaubert
JF: Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen. My review is here.