HE
THINKS IT WAS JUST YOU HE MARRIED
by
Judith Offer
Without
any warning
He
has broken all our words,
Carried
them around his town
Leaving
them at doorsteps: Unattached,
They
hop whatever breeze and rustle off,
Unconnected,
with nothing to mean by.
Is
that why you wander your yard,
Collecting
the floating autumn leaves?
We will basket them with you
If you show us which ones.
The
night that you told us
We
burned your pain in our fireplace
And
when it was ashes
Buried
it in our love. We would have
Slept
with you between us like a baby,
And
on into the next day
Which
grayed over and teared quietly,
Like
you, trying not to disturb.
It’s too late: We’re long past not caring
And we have to cry, too.
In
the cold sunrises
Your
fair child sleeps uneasy
To
dreams of Daddy
Coming
home. We want to hold her
And
tell her he will soon put his clothes
Back
in the closet. But last time he came
He
lined it with leaves
And
told her to sleep in it.
After a while will we all get used
To your small daughter on a shelf?
With
winter coming in
We
could bring you candles by the armload.
But
the light you look for
Would
come in his eyes. At least we can
All
build a fire so the child won’t freeze.
Clean
the ash heap from your heath;
We
will take it outside
And
throw it at the wind.
Whatever catches in our eyes
Will wash with tears.
*
* * * *
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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