To His Lost Lover by Simon Armitage
Shannon shared this beautiful poem with me last year. I keep it close and return to it often.
Now they are no longer
any trouble to each otherhe can turn things over, get down to that list
of things that never happened, all of the lostunfinishable business.
For instance… for instance,how he never clipped and kept her hair, or drew a hairbrush
through that style of hers, and never knew how not to blushat the fall of her name in close company.
How they never slept like buried cutlery –two spoons or forks cupped perfectly together,
or made the most of some heavy weather –walked out into hard rain under sheet lightning,
or did the gears while the other was driving.How he never raised his fingertips
to stop the segments of her lipsfrom breaking the news,
or tasted the fruitor picked for himself the pear of her heart,
or lifted her hand to where his own heartwas a small, dark, terrified bird
in her grip. Where it hurt.Or said the right thing,
or put it in writing.And never fled the black mile back to his house
before midnight, or coaxed another button of her blouse,then another,
or knew herfavourite colour,
her taste, her flavour,and never ran a bath or held a towel for her,
or soft-soaped her, or whipped her hairinto an ice-cream cornet or a beehive
of lather, or acted out of turn, or misbehavedwhen he might have, or worked a comb
where no comb had been, or walked back homethrough a black mile hugging a punctured heart,
where it hurt, where it hurt, or helped her handto his butterfly heart
in its two blue halves.And never almost cried,
and never once describedan attack of the heart,
or under a silk shirtnursed in his hand her breast,
her left, like a tear of fleshwept by the heart,
where it hurts,or brushed with his thumb the nut of her nipple,
or drank intoxicating liquors from her navel.Or christened the Pole Star in her name,
or shielded the mask of her face like a flame,a pilot light,
or stayed the night,or steered her back to that house of his,
or said “Don’t ask me how it isI like you.
I just might do.”How he never figured out a fireproof plan,
or unravelled her hand, as if her handwere a solid ball
of silver foiland discovered a lifeline hiding inside it,
and measured the trace of his own alongside it.But said some things and never meant them –
sweet nothings anybody could have mentioned.And left unsaid some things he should have spoken,
about the heart, where it hurt exactly, and how often.

January 27th, 2011 at 12:50 pm
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Paul Badger, Angela Quayle. Angela Quayle said: Jason Shim shares a breathtaking Simon Armitage poem: http://www.jasonshim.net/2010/10/04/to-his-lost-lover/ [...]