I can (do you?) remember those creaking doors
In that comedy film of Monsieur Hulot´s Holiday
Through which a waiter wandered to serve poor lost souls
Seated at tables sparse and bare.
Who is it who now comes into
this un-living-room for the unloved
In our half way house to death?
Can it be a nurse to check my pulse, wipe my brow and clean my soiled commode?
But no, she smiles, sits beside me, shows photographs,
Mostly faded black and white, and tries to jump-start a conversation
By recalling memories that are no longer mine.
Jack and Jill who climbed a hill,
Peter and Paul who perhaps robbed each other,
Two Elizabeths who sat on thrones in ages far apart
Saucy Sue, Cantankerous Kate; Tom, Dick and Harry
The supposed persona of a past existence which better stays that way
As histories of times gone by and people now to me unknown.
Soon those doors will swing to let me through
To make my fractured way to a mausoleum of forgotten dreams
And I may pass to find the answers to
All this woman´s questions, laughs and tears.