With Emma at the Ladies-Only Swimming Pond on Hampstead Heath

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In payment for those mornings at the mirror while, 
 at her
 expense, I’d started my late learning in Applied

French Braids, for all
 the mornings afterward of Hush 
 and Just stand still,

to make some small amends for every reg-
 iment-
 ed bathtime and short-shrifted goodnight kiss,

I did as I was told for once, 
 gave up
 my map, let Emma lead us through the woods

“by instinct,” as the drunkard knew 
 the natural
 prince. We had no towels, we had

no “bathing costumes,” as the children’s novels 
 call them here, and I 
 am summer’s dullest hand at un-

premeditated moves. But when
 the coppice of sheltering boxwood 
 disclosed its path and posted

rules, our wonted bows to seemliness seemed 
 poor excuse.
 The ladies in their lumpy variety lay

on their public half-acre of lawn, 
 the water
 lay in dappled shade, while Emma

in her underwear and I 
 in an ill-
 fitting borrowed suit availed us of

the breast stroke and a modified 
 crawl.
 She’s eight now. She will rather

die than do this in a year or two 
 and lobbies,
 even as we swim, to be allowed to cut

her hair. I do, dear girl, I will 
 give up
 this honey-colored metric of augmented

thirds, but not (shall we climb 
 on the raft
 for a while?) not yet.

© Michael Rosen