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The Week of Four Thursdays

“La semaine des quatre jeudis”

By Patrick M. OhanaPublished 2 years ago 1 min read
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This French expression, dating from the 15th century, evolved from two to four Thursdays. At the time, Thursday represented the children’s day of rest but also the fat day when one could eat at will in the religious sense. This ideal inspired dreams but was, of course, impossible. I wonder if it can be granted, after all.

The week of four Thursdays is slowly approaching

A year or perhaps a month, surely encroaching

The three days left could be Sundays or Saturdays

Or better yet — O Anthi — let them be Thursdays

The week of seven Thursdays is even more strained

Yet I am sure my Anthi will be alike, reigned

The week of four Thursdays is at hand and one more

I am holding it in my mind close to the core

I have a dentist appointment on Thursday next

It is easy to know which given the subtext

November 9, 2023, not the one

Before or after or any other rerun

Η εβδομάδα των τεσσάρων Πέμπτων μου*

Allows me to delight in my Anthi anew

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* My week of the four Thursdays, in Greek, pronounced: E evdomáda ton tessáron Pébton mou.

love poems

About the Creator

Patrick M. Ohana

A medical writer who reads and writes fiction and some nonfiction, although the latter may appear at times like the former. Most of my pieces (over 2,200) are or will be available on Shakespeare's Shoes.

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  • Dharrsheena Raja Segarran2 years ago

    Oh wow, I've never heard of that expression before. Thank you so much for sharing that and I loved your poem!

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