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.