In your pink wool knitted dress Before anything had smudged anything You stood at the altar. Bloomsday. Rain - so that a just-bought umbrella Was the only furnishing about me Newer than three years inured. My tie - sole, drab, veteran RAF black - Was the used-up symbol of a tie. My chord jacket - thrice-dyed black, exhausted, Just hanging on to itself. I was a post-war, utility son-in-law! Not quite the Frog-Prince. Maybe the Swineherd Stealing this daughter's pedigree dreams From under her watchtowered searchlit future. No ceremony could conscript me Out of my uniform. I wore my whole wardrobe - Except for the odd, spare, identical item. My wedding, like Nature, wanted to hide. However, - if we were going to be married It had better be Westminster Abbey. Why not? The Dean told us why not. That is how I learned that I had a Parish Church. St George of the Chimney Sweeps. So we squeezed into marriage finally. Your mother, brave even in this US Foreign Affairs gamble. Acted all bridesmaids and all guests, Even - magnanimity - represented My family Who had heard nothing about it. I had invited only their ancesters. I had not even confided my theft of you To a closest friend. For best man - my squire To hold the meanwhile rings - We requisitioned the sexton. Twist the outrage: He was packing children into a bus, Taking them to the Zoo - in that downpour! All the prison animals had to be patient While we married. You were transfigured. So slender and new and naked, A nodding spray of wet lilac. You shook, you sobbed with joy, you were ocean depth Brimming with God. You said you saw the heavens open And show riches, ready to drop upon us. Levitated beside you, I stood subjected To a strange tense: the spellbound future. In that echo-gaunt, weekday chancel I see you Wrestling to contain your flames In your pink wool knitted dress And in your eye-pupils - great cut jewels Jostling their tear-flames, truly like big jewels Shaken in a dice-cup and held up to me.