Originally Posted by
Stevie
I too like the dream keeper poem. Difficult to follow that but here we are in a new day, remembering or not remembering dreams, and all I have to offer is this poem by Pat Winslow that I find really funny and have been meaning to post on here for ages, just as a change. Her interpretation of the situation was a surprise, to me anyway, and probably why I found it funny. Hope you all do too.
Mycroft and Sherlock by Pat Winslow
You'd call them singular, I suppose.
They were forever counting.
How many steps from our bedpost to the tallboy,
how many stairs to the landing.
There wasn't a cupboard
they hadn't opened or found the key to.
They made an inventory
of everything from saucers to coats.
Holidays were a nightmare -
how many quarter mile posts between stations,
what size boots the ticket inspector wore,
what he'd eaten the day before.
They could look at a train and tell you
what the weather was like in Carlisle.
You can't imagine how many friends we lost.
The 'samples' nurse found beneath their beds -
cigar butts, half-drained glasses, combs,
handerkerchiefs and socks and underwear.
The drugs I can understand. Their father did it.
And at least it kept them quiet.
But the tendency to want the truth,
the whole truth and nothing but.
Our guests were MPs and businessmen.
Besides, I had a lover.
That was soon over. And my marriage.
They didn't care. They had each other.
And later, Sherlock had that doctor.
The signs were there, of course.
I just never saw them.