The Farmer's Wife
to sip champagne
in Paris.
what was it like to lose the man
you knew
as home
to cook his last meal
without realizing it was
his last
what was it like
to sway in a rocking chair that knew
the gentle curve of your hips, wood bending
for old age and apple pies consumed,
year after year
what was it like
dancing to the quiet music
of a broom
on hardwood floors,
swish, swish, swish
what was it like
to scrub every inch
of the farmhouse
over and over again for fifty years, memorizing,
like a poem or psalm
the cracks and ridges
that only you
knew
what was it like to walk the rows,
where the corn grows
what was it like
to hold five babies in your belly,
and know them later as people
what was it like to wake with the chickens,
catching their eggs before they knew
they had laid them
everyday
without an alarm
just to wake
and know what has to be done
because no one else
will do it
what was it like
to fix a million meals
with colonial white bread,
butter and
to hold five babies in your belly,
and know them later as people
what was it like to wake with the chickens,
catching their eggs before they knew
they had laid them
everyday
without an alarm
just to wake
and know what has to be done
because no one else
will do it
what was it like
to fix a million meals
with colonial white bread,
butter and
jam jarred
on a wet summer night,
wiping
sweat and dead mosquitoes away, wondering
what it would be like
wiping
sweat and dead mosquitoes away, wondering
what it would be like
to sip champagne
in Paris.
what was it like to lose the man
you knew
as home
to cook his last meal
without realizing it was
his last
what was it like
to sway in a rocking chair that knew
the gentle curve of your hips, wood bending
for old age and apple pies consumed,
year after year
what was it like
dancing to the quiet music
of a broom
on hardwood floors,
swish, swish, swish
and dip
and the clock tick-tocking
and dip again
reminding the hours
reminding the hours
there is still life
between the
between the
little
and big hand
and big hand
what was it like
to scrub every inch
of the farmhouse
over and over again for fifty years, memorizing,
like a poem or psalm
the cracks and ridges
that only you
knew
what was it like to walk the rows,
where the corn grows
like a green green wall
and loneliness has no sound
what was it like when sleep wouldn’t come
because it was just too quiet
to sleep
and loneliness has no sound
what was it like when sleep wouldn’t come
because it was just too quiet
to sleep
what was it like
on your last day...
on your last day...
you said, ‘I have been blessed to know all of you,’
what was it like not to know
what was it like not to know
that it was we who were blessed,
even though
even though
we never would know
what it was like
to be you.
what it was like
to be you.
- by Froggymama
8 comments:
Absolutely stunning. Thank you for that little bit of beauty on a grey rainy day here.
Oh my, this reminds me of my aunt who cooked every day for the farmhands who worked for her husband in the tobacco fields in north Florida.
Remembering her sweeping the wood floors and many other things.
That is beautiful writing, Froggymama. Give us more, please, in all your spare time. :-)
Oh,Froggymamma,you made me bawl. I don't do that very often. Grandma B. has been remembered well. Aunt B.
Wasn't the original title of this
"Ode to Aunt Jo"???
I'm sure this is about ME.
Quite beautiful, FM.
When you become famous, I'll still
be your aunt, fa
Oh how I love love love you writing.
georgeous, love it. jcn
That poem just broke my heart, and all the memories of home rushed in. Thank you for your beautiful words, and for giving me tears that are wonderful to cry. Mom was a blessing we'll never lose.
E-boy-Mama
SO SO SO beautiful, lyrical, and visual.
submit this to the new yorker!
(c mcc)
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