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Mrs. Percival's Toilet Water

From Wilma in the Valley
Revision as of 14:43, 26 June 2025 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Template:Youtube}} ====Mrs Percival's Toilet Water ==== <poem> I knew her smell through seven years from five to twelve For me blue lilac toilet water meant Mrs Percival I had seen the bottle on her dressing table and wondered why she didn't use rose water Too young to know women are as different as the scents they choose to wear or in some cases not wear Preacher Philpot's wife said perfume was a snare of Satan though she loved her own flower garden sat swinging...")
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Mrs Percival's Toilet Water

I knew her smell
through seven years
from five to twelve

For me
blue lilac toilet water
meant Mrs Percival

I had seen the bottle
on her dressing table
and wondered why
she didn't use rose water

Too young to know
women are as different
as the scents they choose
to wear
or in some cases
not wear

Preacher Philpot's wife
said perfume was a snare
of Satan

though she loved her own
flower garden
sat swinging on her porch
breathing its heavy fragrance

Notes


McDaniel, Wilma. (2001) Borrowed Coats. Hanging Loose Press, Brooklyn, New York.
Courtesy University of California, Merced Library. Copyright owned by the Regents of the University of California.