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Meet Me At The Flagpoles

Flagpoles at Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon

Daniel Bacon, author of Walking San Francisco On the Barbary Coast Trail took me on a walk once.  We stopped by the Westin St. Francis to admired the historic Viennese grandfather clock.  He told me the significance of the clock, that it was for generations a designated place for people to meet.  Thus the phrase, “Meet me at the Clock.” was coined.

I told him there was such a spot in Hong Kong when I was growing up—the flagpoles on the Kowloon Peninsula where the Star Ferry docked.  As a teenager I received mysterious letters once in a while.  They were pen pal letters.  Some came from far away places like France and Australia.  But there were local ones too.  At some point of the correspondence a photo was requested.  I always felt squirmy and anxious as the letters usually stop after I sent the photo.  Somehow I didn’t fit the dream that was on the other side.

One time I received letters in the form of poems.  This was from a boy in Hong Kong.  He wrote beautifully, classical, rhymed poems that melted my heart.  I tried to find out who he was but none of my friends seemed to know such a person.  Did he write these poems or did he copy them from books?  It didn’t matter much to me.  All I wanted was to keep receiving his letters.

Then the inevitable moment came, when he thought that we should meet.  Where?  At the flagpoles, of course.  I went with a fatalistic attitude.  Sometimes this kind of meeting turned out to be a set up, with friends sneaking around watching the date and then bursting into the scene.  Knowledge of such meeting could also turn into gossip and I wouldn’t hear the end of it until the next victim was trapped.

I arrived at the agreed time.  The flagpoles were never so visible.  I didn’t see the poet.  I didn’t see anyone that could have been the person who wrote those lovely poems.  After five minutes I fled.  As expected, I never heard from him again.

Photo by jymsn123.

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