AND
THEIRS, THEM
by Judith
Offer
We are
the women of small histories/
diaries, journals, letters to our
sisters/
whose
mothers recited earlier accounts
while
mixing turkey stuffing or brownies
in any
coffee-flavored kitchen.
We are
the keepers of lesser treasures/
relish recipes, songs our uncles
sang,
steps to the old dances/
whose
children are relentlessly photographed
and ride
the years from sharp to fading
in masks
of cellophane.
We are
the bearers of background memories/
his last words, her first song,
Thanksgiving before the war/
whose
grandchildren will grow
to
remember us
and theirs,
them.
* * * * *
"And Theirs,
Them" first appeared in the author's collection The First Apples.
Judith Offer has had two daughters, five books
of poetry and dozens of plays. (Eighteen of the latter, including six musicals,
have been produced.) She has read her
poetry at scores of poetry venues, but is particularly delighted to have been
included in the Library of Congress series and on “All Things Considered,” on
NPR. Her writing reflects her childhood
in a large Catholic family—with some Jewish roots—her experience as teacher,
community organizer, musician, historian, gardener, and all-purpose volunteer,
and her special fascination with her roles of wife and mother. Her most recent book of poetry, called DOUBLE
CROSSING, is poems about Oakland, California, where she lives with her husband,
Stuart.
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