Terry L Probert is a novelist and shortstory writer. His debut novel KUNDELA earned a commendation in the 2013 FAW Christina Stead Award. Currently looking for an agent/publisher to bring any of his novels to print, Terry is a member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers, Writers Victoria and SA Writers. Terry is active in his local literary community. His Short Story Banib the Bunyip placed second in the City of Melton Short Story Competition 2013.
Wednesday, 25 September 2024
Tear Stained Memories
Staring at a photo, hanging crooked
From an aging rusting nail on his wall
Drags back a tear-stained memory…
From a time, he’s yet to heal
Drawn by the rhythms of the river,
He’s a wanderer, a minstrel
A brown water vagabond
Music flowing from his hands
He hears the sounds of children
Singing in the street
And… the songs they are singing
Take him back to who knows when…
Erasing memories of the party years
And friends he’s near forgot
Before all the backstage passes,
He’d worked little country halls, and pubs
All the songs he’s sung and played,
Lay crumbling in the dust
All the, now forgotten faces
Of a thousand screaming girls
Who… beyond bright and glowing footlights,
In the loudness of those shadows
He’d grabbed and greedy kissed
Their bright nail polished fingers
Scouring bloodlines on his back
And remembers their soft and naked breasts
On his blonde mat of tangled curls
Now going grey upon his chest
Alone, sometimes he finds a grateful silence,
When the memory of his music softly sleeps
And from deep within that inky blackness
Into his mind she creeps
And again, her memory haunts him
When through twilight shadows, of life’s din
He sees himself there before her, kneeling
The memory never thins.
Trembles overcome him and sinking to his knees
Again, he feels his heart begin its drumming
Three-four time in his chest
He stumbles, a poet in searching desperation,
For practiced words he needs to tell her,
Such sweet words, now dying, unspoken on his tongue
He feels her graceful fingers reaching,
Searching for his calloused hand
In his pocket he still fumbles his frantic searching
For an ancient family heirloom
That fits the third finger on a lover’s soft left hand
Forged from a tiny golden nugget
Decades ago, his great grandfather found
The old man with love and caring had shaped into a ring
He set it with tiny diamond, he traded for his cart.
Love’s little token for his only ever sweetheart
Until the day she died, she’d worn it
A treasured testament to love
And in a lonely outback gravesite
Their names are etched on roughhewn stone
She sleeps there beside him, so they’ll never be alone.
Within all that mournful sadness
As they eased her casket down
His father passed her jewel to him,
That self-same tiny, heirloom,
His great grandmother’s ring
Now, all these lonely decades later
It swings from a chain around his neck
And he can still feel his fingers shaking
At the memory from that time
When he offered her his hand,
Something she declined
He’s still searching in the agonising, twilight
For an answer any answer,
To ease his tortured mind
Where is that love so tender
From that girl from the river,
A love he knows he’ll never find
Though her memory ever haunts him,
He knows deep within his troubled heart she’s gone
He prays to wake another day where on the other side
To again kneel before her
And hear the sound of angels singing
Ave maria.
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