Wednesday, 6 January 2010
Samantha's Cracked Skin
in the long, cold days before her father installed central heating
(thanks to a grant offered by the local council)
Samantha would spend December to February in her bed
wrapped in blankets with an extra eiderdown and chenille throw
and wearing a woolley hat (knitted by her Aunt Agatha) and socks on her hands,
staring out through windows encrusted with ice on the inside
at a world passing her by with nary a glance behind.
she ventured out once a day for a flask of tea and another of soup
and once a week to visit the library to replenish her dwindling supply
of adventure novels and science fiction and tales of elves and goblins;
and once a month to visit the doctor
who would apply ointment and bandages to her cracked skin
and refuse to talk about the creatures that lived inside her
like fairies in a hollow earth
that only came out when she was alone.
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13 comments:
I don't know which I love more but the watercolor just fascinates me.
Thank you Satia :)
I was with you right up until the last. Then it's nothing but pure Ewwwwwww!
(Lord I hope it's not snakes)
*laughs*
Sorry Aims!
reminds me of my mum's house and my childhood(minus the creatures). she never got central heating - she thought it was most wasteful to heat rooms you weren't using.
My parents couldn't afford it. We regularly chipped ice off the inside of the windows.
Poor child.
I had ice growing inside my window in the winter, but nothing that bad and never such lack of love.
Nor I, thankfully.
Lovely poem - until the end!! Did anyone have central heating then? We certainly didn't. The ice used to make wonderful patterns though!
Central or not -- most people had some sort of heating. We had none.
Oh. That's so sad, the desolation I think more than the cold. Beautiful painting, too, Rachel.
Thanks Stephanie
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