celebrating and creating our own LGBTQI+ history in honour of Sheila McWattie

Day two

Fug

You took my breath away then,

Back then, over on an island in the med

Anxiously wondering if we would ever get home.

Police with guns, protecting the sand

From our potential lethality.

Permitted only round the hotel pool and then,

just a balcony. Bar closed. Plane home a relief.

Attuned to the perhaps plague cough

of the man in the row behind. Giving to recycled air.

If we were all going to die let it be in our own beds.

Gatwick like a film set.  Abandoned.

Surreal.  No duty free.

Roads so empty. Newsreaders

With a Morgan Freeman script.

The end of the world, pending.

Telly ads still promised glossy hair

And the holidays no-one would take

Did somebody say just eat?

We did.  And we did.

And we noticed the birds singing.

Were the stars brighter? We wondered

We played in the empty roads

Like naughty children. 

Is this clean air? We wondered.

The animals came in their two by two

And ate the plants and caused havoc

And we laughed in wonder as they too

Walked in the roads. Enjoyed the space.

Exercising the dog a chore everyone wanted.

We said hello to strangers. From a distance.

From a distance.

Two metres for life, mask and shield.

We clapped with gelled chapped, latex gloved hands.

Scoured panic pecked aisles and glared

At guarded, sanitised trolleys, Andrex laden.

And the wonder-full quiet, calm, peace

Was shattered by the tolling of the bells.

So many bells.  So many bells. So many bells.

And I ached for the unconcealed smiles of a gig crush and

Breathing the fug of a crowded bar.

Lel Meleyal, (age 61), Scarborough

Comments on: "Day two" (4)

  1. fioxirose's avatar

    What a brilliant choice of title’s Lel – Fug – so short but conjures up such a big full steamy atmosphere of a busy club. Great opening line ‘You took my breath away then,’ as there’s an expectation that it might be a love poem, and it’s great as it’s nearly the opposite. It’s also great I think in its poignancy, given struggling to breathe, is such a horrible symptom of Covid.
    You are so good at using language economically whilst creating such powerful emotion – the fear that is communicated in the simple line ‘ If we were all going to die be in own beds.’
    The Just eat reference is so spot on and your wonderful sense of humour is shining through
    ‘Did somebody say just eat? We did. And we did.’

    I love how you conjure up so much of the common experience in sharp detail and capture a slice of our shared history… ‘We clapped with gelled chapped, latex gloved hands.’ and ” unconcealed smiles’ … So loaded and just brilliantly observed.

    The tolling of bells….and repeating ‘ So many bells. So many bells. So many bells.’ is really clever as through the repeated short sentences I can hear bells, like Ding. Ding. Ding.

    The longing in the last line is so powerful and sort of hopeful as whilst it hankers for something experienced in the past it directs us to the future too

  2. jonesyj08's avatar

    Brilliant! It reads like an apocalyptic movie but wait..we’re in it

  3. jennylobb@gmail.com's avatar
    jennylobb@gmail.com said:

    So good, evoking the surreal experiences of the first lockdown

    Sent from my iPad

    >

  4. fioxirose's avatar

    “Very evocative” says Sheree Bell on lesbianWhitstable and dykes in the surrounding area FB site

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