LYDIA first appeared in Poetry, June 1988, and was later included in Geraldine Connollys first book of poems, Food For the Winter (Purdue University Press, 1990) The poem was reprinted in The 1988 Arvon Anthology (ed. Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes, Lancashire, England.)
LYDIA
There was life before us
my sister and I discovered
looking at photographswe shouldn't have been looking at
of the English girl my fatherwas engaged to during the war.
Here she is right in front of our eyes,the woman before my mother,
in a black lace cocktail dress,a cigarette in a holder,
pensive, earthywaitingin front of the carved wooden radio,
for news from the front.
This is the war, after all,
and here she is again, somewhereon an English beach, draped
across my father's shoulderall of her silky skin radiant
above the soft folds of sun dress.They stand in front of a sign
that reads "Seaside Cottages,two dollars." And here she is
again, painted onto the cockpitof my father's plane with hardly
anything on at all, and here he isin his flight jacket, looking
in fact, happy. My sister and I eachlift our pencils like cigarettes,
taking long sultry drags to puff
out invisible rings. They rise
in the air like silver noosesthat will catch our father
and hold him to us.
©Geraldine Connelly, 1988, 1990.