REMEMBRANCE
I
a
lone old woman—
dried
leaves swirling
around
her feet;
she
looks in my direction,
and
you return from a long way
a
bite in the wind—
her
hand lifts to secure
her
ruffled hair;
from
somewhere in memory
you
tell me to button up
snow
by morning—
the
old woman tightens her belt
and
shudders;
I
move to help her along,
but
she's lost in the shadows
REMEMBRANCE
II
October's
chill—
from
the old man's window
leaves
dying slowly,
a
beginning race with time
and
the weather
all
night the rain
and
the knocking wind—
he
speaks in whispers
and
waits for a morning
that
doesn't come
clearing
skies—
the
dull thud of damp earth
on
the coffin;
how
can a hundred and six years
be
confined in so small a space?
Ribbons, 2007
Ribbons, 2007
2 comments:
nursing home
a woman asks me
to guess her age
Actually happened. The right answer was 105.
These are two lovely groups.
Thank you, Bill. I always get sentimental in autumn; my mother died in November, and my father in October, 13 years later.
Adelaide
Post a Comment