A poem that follows a journey from a broad topic to one womans sorrow |
Everything slept The sun slept Behind the mist of city smog dancing between the skyscrapers The buildings slept, lights down low, people at home, Sleeping The church slept, no light shone through its windows Its candles all snuffed, wax dried And on the stone steps of the church a man slept With holes in his boots and a cap on his head And on his back, his jacket slept like a blanket Keeping him warm 93 north slept, so did route 3, Pavement cool and unmarred By the tires of the cars, That slept in their driveways, their garages and parking lots No key in their engines with their tires turned off. Travelers and tourists slept in moth eaten beds Between itchy sheets labeled Motel 6. For once the Bickfords next door slept, No teenagers or coffee drinkers munching down food. The trees on my street slept, Like my house and my yard. The snores from the other rooms told me, All my family slept. But, that night I could not sleep. I softly moved down the stairs that squeaked and awakened with each step Past my dog, who always sleeps. Through the dining room where the chinaware slept, Only to awaken on Christmas day There, sleeping on the family room pull out couch I saw her My great aunt lay in an ocean of pastel pink sheets With a tiny blue flower pattern scattered across them Her gray hair, usually confined to a cap or scarf, Flowed freely around her wrinkled face and her fragile neck. Her small body swam in her oversized nightgown Covered in lace and small white embroidered designs She stitched her self. Her mouth frowning so often now was at rest Her watery eyes empty for once All her tears spilt out earlier that night Onto the handkerchief, Its old monogram faded and worn His initials, JAL just a shadow of what they once were And his memory just a shadow in our minds My great uncle now slept for ever. My aunt’s shoulders shook as she sobbed again in her sleep And I stepped back again into the shadows of my house Leaving her alone in her sorrow |