I am sorry, she would say: That's all right, I would murmur. She stood with her back toward me, my nose nearly touching. The train lurched to the right, giving me the space to breathe in freely, and I waited for the swing back when I would have to lift her from my chest, with my two hands -- how else? -- braced against her buttocks, and I waited in the sober spirit of the ride. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE INNOVATOR by STEPHEN VINCENT BENET MOTHER'S LOVE by THOMAS BURBIDGE THE PLAINT OF THE CAMEL by CHARLES EDWARD CARRYL THE LOST SHEEP by ELIZABETH CECILIA CLEPHANE SONG TOURNAMENT: NEW STYLE by LOUIS UNTERMEYER SONNET by THEODORE AGRIPPA D' AUBIGNE A SISTER OF SORROW: 3. WEDDING-EVE by GORDON BOTTOMLEY |