It was Valentine’s Day, a blind date,
and on the sidewalk, angry since I was late,
she sat astride the leather suitcase,
chainsmoking, frowning, wearing a lace
camisole, her blonde hair tied in a band.
I gave her my hand.
There followed the dizzy abbreviated spring
we were in love, flattering
our nervous unhardened animal
natures, knowing more the rise than fall
of love, or what we named love, having no better word.
Virgins are of course absurd,
say those who have forgotten the rest,
the French curve of a teenage breast
and all the destruction that follows, in bed.
Blossoms marked the spring of the dead,
the war stalled in the jungles of Vietnam,
the arrowy flights of SAM
missiles through the newspaper half-tone,
and, each night, her throaty voice on the phone.
Then she was gone, pregnant, to another life
from which she called years later, wif ...
William Logan will have a volume of early selected poems out in the spring
more from this author
This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 20 March 2002, on page 36
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