Olive Oil
Posted: 02 November 2005 Word Count: 186
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A lamp on your bedside table, and a small bottle of olive oil. A magic potion, holding the key to your life’s mystery. The label, grease spotted, from the chemist in those days, when the Coop sold flour from bins and a man brought milk in a cart. You were an enigma to me, though I could sit on your lap on the striped deckchair and hold onto your ear and suck my thumb. A table spoon of olive oil when you woke, your panacea. Once you let me taste it. Poured it out like medicine, bitter on my tongue and in my head, your memories of that long battle in Italy, returning to a daughter who didn’t know you, to make a flawed but happy son who would be a child forever. In the end you were not immortal, not the omnipotent patriarch we all respected and obeyed. There was a day when I turned from my son’s pram to push your wheelchair with such a practised ease and knew your olive oil had not protected you, that I must be my own lucky charm.
Comments by other Members
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miffle at 11:02 on 02 November 2005
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I like the swirl of emotions in this poem and also the seeming sacredness of ordinary things. All the best, Nikki
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