您现在的位置是:首页 > 学科知识查询 > 英语百科 > 英语诗歌

My Parents Have Come Home Laughing

编辑:chaxungu时间:2022-10-13 03:03:37分类:英语诗歌

by Mark Jarman

My parents have come home laughing

From the feast for Robert Burns, late, on foot;

They have leaned against graveyard walls,

Have bent double in the glittering frost,

Their bladders heavy with tea and ginger.

Burns, suspended in a drop, is flicked away

As they wipe their eyes, and is not offended.

What could offend him? Not the squeaking bagpipe

Nor the haggis which, when it was sliced, collapsed

In a meal of blood and oats

Nor the man who read a poem by Scott

As the audience hissed embarrassment

Nor the principal speaker whose topic,

"Burns' View of Crop Rotation," was intended

For farmers, who were not present,

Nor his attempt to cover this error, reciting

The only Burns poem all evening,

"Nine Inch Will Please a Lady," to thickening silence.

They drop their coats in the hall,

Mother first to the toilet, then Father,

And then stand giggling at the phone,

Debating a call to the States, decide no,

And the strength to keep laughing breaks

In a sigh. I hear, as their tired ribs

Press together, their bedroom door not close

And hear also a weeping from both of them

That seems not to be pain, and it comforts me