• If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

"When I Look at the Old Car"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • "When I Look at the Old Car"

    "When I Look at the Old Car"
    by Marcia F. Brown

    When I look at the old car
    backed into the cleared-out space in the shed,
    I can almost understand
    those bewildered men who leave
    their softening wives in middle age, up-
    and-walk-out after decades
    of marriage and family, to take up
    with some buffed and waxed young thing
    with great lines, horsepower
    to burn and a dazzling array
    of untested equipment.

    When I look at the old car's
    headlights, dulled with disuse and staring
    at me, as if to say, What did I ever do?
    Wasn't I always good to you?
    Turned over every morning, rain or snow
    to start your day? Kept you safe
    all these years, mile after mile?
    And I'm filled with guilt and say with feeling
    You're absolutely right. You were the best. There'll never
    be another you, as I glance surreptitiously
    at my cute new model sitting in the old car's space
    in the garage and explain, You just got old.
    You're falling apart. And besides, I say,
    I've fallen in love. We're already living together.
    And the old car looks like it might be wired
    to explode.

    So I walk across the yard
    and look at the new car,
    and it occurs to me that before too long
    the new car will be old, the suspension
    will sag and things will fall off.
    And like the lout who'll use up
    his young fling and want to trade in again,
    we'll deny that we've put on some miles ourselves,
    dump this one in the shed and go shopping —

    until someone lays a firm hand on our arm
    and says Enough. You just can't drive any more.

    "When I Look at the Old Car" by Marcia F. Brown, from What on Earth. © Moon Pie Press, 2010.
    Swirls hide in the black molecular depths, only waiting for the right time to emerge and destroy your sanity.
    --Al Kimel

  • #2
    Re: "When I Look at the Old Car"

    Great poem. Quite the analogy.
    quality creates its own demand

    Comment

    Your Privacy Choices
    Working...
    X