Showing posts with label elegy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elegy. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2019

Elegy, Surrounded by Seven Trees • National Poetry Month



Elegy, Surrounded by Seven Trees

for Michele Antoinette Pray-Griffiths


Ordinary days deliver joy easily 
again & I can’t take it. If I could tell you 
how her eyes laughed or describe 
the rage of her suffering, I must 
admit that lately my memories 
are sometimes like a color 
warping in my blue mind. 
Metal abandoned in rain. 

My mother will not move. 

Which is to say that 
sometimes the true color of 
her casket jumps from my head 
like something burnt down 
in the genesis of a struck flame. 
Which is to say that I miss
the mind I had when I had
my mother. I own what is yet. 
Which means I am already
holding my own absence 
in faith. I still carry a faded slip of paper 
where she once wrote a word 
with a pencil & crossed it out. 

From tree to tree, around her grave
I have walked, & turned back 
if only to remind myself 
that there are some kinds of 
peace, which will not be 
moved. How awful to have such 
wonder. The final way wonder itself 
opened beneath my mother’s face 
at the last moment. As if she was 
a small girl kneeling in a puddle 
& looking at her face for the first time, 
her fingers gripping the loud, 
wet rim of the universe. 


by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
courtesy poets.org

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Elegy, and a Daffodil

This poem is for Cindy, who died a year ago today — and for her good friend Kathy, and the others who miss her so.

What Came to Me

I took the last
dusty piece of china
out of the barrel.
It was your gravy boat,
with a hard, brown
drop of gravy still
on the porcelain lip.
I grieved for you then
as I never had before.

by Jane Kenyon
(courtesy Poets.org)


And here is a lovely daffodil poem.

Nearly Twenty Years

Nearly twenty years
I tell him I love yellow roses
They are delivered
Red or dark red
I thank him for remembering

The anniversary date
The accomplishment
The growth
The change

Nearly twenty years
A bouquet of daffodils, daisies, periwinkle, iris
A white dress, a black tuxedo
I tell him I love periwinkle
He remembers

The periwinkle shirt
The small periwinkle bracelet
The periwinkle earrings
The periwinkle paper

Nearly twenty years
Daffodils blooming in the center strip
Yellow like the roses I love
The very yellow in my wedding bouquet
My son says he can’t remember

Seeing such beautiful flowers
Seeing condensed color in a road
Seeing spring coming forth
Seeing sunlight as bright

Nearly twenty years
I long for yellow roses
I see yellow daffodils
I think of my husband, my sons
And I wonder if they will remember

by Maryclare Maslyn

Tomorrow, more daffodils.