The Door

by Neil Donnelly

There’s an old boy running for the bus!

shouts a passenger, stepping off. Driver

waits, keeps the door open while his impatient

engine irritates. The old boy, slower than a winter

tortoise, emerges, then plops down into the seat

beside me. We are on our way.

*

I had a chance to see Dylan

Thomas read his poetry in New York

once, he begins, but I didn’t go,

thought I’d see him again….

*

He’s silent until the bus terminates

across from Whittington Hospital

in Archway. Door won’t open.

We wait. He recites:

*

Used to run here

and there, long distance,

short, ran everywhere.

But now, when I

ascend the stairs.

I say my prayers,

and hope the devil won’t be waiting there.

*

Finally, door opens. And as we

go our separate ways, he says:

*

The door failing to open or close,

isn’t really the fault of the door.

Neil Donnelly

Neil Donnelly is the author of the poetry collections Tullamore Train and Sister Caravaggio, and several plays produced at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin.