The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by E. Laura Golberg
IN OUR SIXTIES
you pack camera, lenses, film.
We capture orange and pink skies
throwing light, long shadows
on landscapes and faces.
We forget small things: exposures, words.
We're traveling from sharp terrains of memory
to where only distant mountains are recalled.
We live now, setting down our world
before the first stroke or heart attack;
no cancer or disease yet to make us dried, frail.
We are as walkers on snow that may give way
unexpectedly, no sound to say it's yielding, no goodbyes.
MURRAY BRIDGE, SOUTH AUSTRALIA, 1867
They built the bridge in England,
labeled girders,
each pin and hole
like flaps and slots of paper dolls,
undid them all
and shipped each part Down Under
to be fitted to its mate:
thousands of couplings,
lovers from past lives
reunited.
The bridge stands there still,
in tension like a good argument,
in compression like making love afterward.
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