The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Roger Pfingston
FIVE SISTERS
a photograph, 2004
In that moment of point and shoot
(the ritual of photos after the noon meal,
later framed 4x6 or album bound)
the families gather by name,
bunch up tight to smile and frown,
the few who always close their eyes.
Someone says, "Mom, let's get one
of you and your sisters together."
And so they form again in the soft light
of maple shade, alive and well,
though two will pass in as many years,
but now the elder sits composed
in a lawn chair while the others
stand behind, chattering like schoolgirls.
How engaged they are, the plain
beauty of their print dresses,
picnic tables covered still with cloth
and plastic, bowls and pans empty
or half-filled, a potluck of 35
or 40, the new generations greeting
the old like friendly strangers.
Four hundred years their collective age,
these sisters born at the close or just
after the Great War, Depression teens
and brides, small-town Indiana mothers
whose husbands hurried ahead,
the weight of the world reduced
to a bearable measure of clay and stone:
Lorene's David, Esther's Walter, Stella's
WHAT'S GIVEN
Two weeks ago our neighbor died
when her mind, altered by dementia,
betrayed her body and she OD'd
on Coumadin. The day before,
as we walked by, her husband
had put his rake aside to talk
about their upcoming 50th,
his face beaming at such a feat.
Five more years for us, you'd said,
beaming back as you spread
the five fingers of your raised hand.
Today, mid-afternoon, we ignore
our own rule (You'll spoil your
supper!),
the two of us like a couple of kids
standing at the kitchen counter,
milk and plate in hand,
banana bread cooling in its pan,
your stepmother's recipe
a yellowed clipping from a small
town paper, sweet Anne, 94,
a state away in that other home.
When our daughter calls, sobbing
her friend's news—six months—
we push our plates away to sit
and talk a while, the day
as random as any with its
vinegar and honey, before we
find our way back to milk and bread.
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