On the Train to Vigo
by Nina Rubinstein AlonsoSpanish children chewing bread and cheese
grandparents taking them somewhere
sturdy people like short towers
holding the little ones in between
the conductor pats the boy on the head
lends him his clumsy man-sized cap
walks him grandly around the train
gives him an orange cotton scarf
brings him back holding his hand
calls him an excellent little man
the girl grips her grandmother’s arm
five years old already feeling how
to fold envy shrink it small
drop it into her secret well
we wonder if she’ll grow up wild
casting off traditional ways
or will she live in the usual style
favoring the male children
today there's little she can do
sadly jealous stubbornly proud
knowing she’s only a girl who must
wait pretending patience being good.
* * * * *
Nina Rubinstein Alonso’s work has appeared in Ploughshares, The New Yorker,
Ibbetson Street, Writing in a Woman’s Voice, Peacock Journal, Muddy River Poetry Review, Southern Women’s Review, etc. Her book This Body was published by David Godine Press, her chapbook Riot Wake is upcoming from Červená Barva Press and a story collection is in the works.
"sadly jealous stubbornly proud"
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written, powerfully familiar. These dynamics are those of my family: five girls, one boy. We lived under different rules. We worked; he played. He grew up to be a jerk.
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