Ageing Poem by Ruth Fainlight

Ageing

Rating: 3.5


Since early middle-age
(say around forty)
I've been writing about ageing,
poems in many registers:
fearful, enraged or accepting
as I moved through the decades.

Now that I'm really old
there seems little left to say.
Pointless to bewail
the decline, bodily and mental;
undignified; boring
not to me only but everyone,

and ridiculous to celebrate
the wisdom supposedly gained
simply by staying alive.
- Nevertheless, to have faith
that you'll be adored as an ancient
might make it all worthwhile.

ii
Ageing means smiling at babies
in their pushchairs and strollers
(wondering if I look as crazy
as Virginia or Algernon -
though I don't plan to bite!)
Realising I'm smiling at strangers.

It means no more roller-skating.
That used to be my favourite
sport, after school, every day:
to strap on my skates,
spin one full circle in place,
then swoop down the hill and away.

When I saw that young girl on her blades,
wind in her hair, sun on her face,
like a magazine illustration
from childhood days, racing
her boyfriend along the pavement:
- then I understood ageing.

Thursday, May 14, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: aging
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Susan Beaumont 09 January 2018

I've recently been awarded a doctorate, a cherished dream. If only I could have expressed myself in a poem as lyrical and powerful as this, to capture what ageing means. Thank you, Ruth.

1 0 Reply
Chinedu Dike 14 May 2015

Nice and well articulated piece of poetry bristling with insight. The young live on hope while the old live on remembrance. A lovely poem indeed. Thanks for sharing. Please read my poem MANDELA - THE IMMORTAL ICON. ➕9

2 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
1 / 2
Ruth Fainlight

Ruth Fainlight

New York City / United States
Close
Error Success