[Skip Navigation]

Poetry Archives

A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

My Picnic With Lolita

Jack Conway

I brought the cherries.
I hoped for heart-shaped sunglasses,
a lollipop, from the movie poster.
I walk to class so weary of hearing them talk.
Poetry isn’t literary, I quote.
It doesn’t know the parts of speech.
Write what you know, I say,
trying to make it sound new.
She tells me her parents died,
at a picnic, just like this.
Lightning, she says, and I think,
Billy Collins beat me to it already.
Lie down, she says, Take your coat off.
I’ll rub your back. I did for Nabokov.
I do as I am told and think,
this is why he invented her and I invited her.
Someday, she will wish to be pretty one more time.
Later, at my desk, I feel a shooting pain up my arm,
a tightness in my chest. So this is my death.
Here. Now. With so many papers still to correct
and wish I could have died at my picnic, with Lolita,
by lightning, instead.
© 2004 Jack Conway. All rights reserved.
From My Picnic With Lolita and Other Poems | North Country Press, 2004
Originally published in Rattle, Issue No. 20, Winter 2003. Reprinted by permission of the author.
Add Keyword Tags

Separate each tag with a space. You may add as many tags as you'd like to each poem.

What are tags?
Tags, sometimes called “folksonomies,” are words that describe or categorize a poem, like “20th century modernism” or “Italian sonnet”. Tags can help you find poems that have something in common, based on how other people classify them.

More Info

This site will work and look better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any Internet device.