Guest poem submitted by Christian T. McCusker :
(Poem #1757) For an Old Girlfriend, Long Dead Lying on that blanket, nights on the seventh green-- in the dry air the faint scent of gasoline, nothing above us but the ragged moon, nothing between but a whispered soon... Well, such was romance in the seventies. Watergate and Cambodia, the public lies, made our love seem, somehow, more true. Of the few things I wanted then, I needed you. I remember our last arguments, my angry calls, then the long silence, those northern falls we drifted toward our newly manufactured lives. Does anything else of us survive? That day in Paris, perhaps, when you swore our crummy hotel was all you were looking for-- each cobbled Paris street, each dry baguette, even the worthless sous nothing you'd forget. Outside, a block away, the endless Seine flowed roughly, then brightly, then... Then nothing. Nothing later went quite that far. I remember that Spring. Those breasts. That car. |
(From a recent issue of the New Yorker; I don't have the issue anymore, nor the date it was published) -- This poem, for me, encapsulates the memory of any great romance -- while Logan's details are specific, everyone that I've shared this with has related to it and sighed as they read the last stanza. The last line, in particular, seems to me to be absolutely perfect: up until that line Logan hadn't mentioned the time of year, her breasts, nor any car. Yet I know exactly who and when he's talking about, and I miss her just as much as he does. The melancholy that I feel on a lazy afternoon thinking about a lost love is exactly this, is exactly what he describes in this poem. Christian T.