For the love of someone very precious to me. |
Fading Light She is ninety-one, my grandmother, A wizened, shriveled relic of a woman. A shadow of the handsome, vital person She once was to me. I watch her sleep, So small and fetal, Helpless and frail, And I think. How badly time robs, While at the same time enriching; Dulling youthful glow, While magnifying inner splendor. Radiating like a beacon, That wisdom gained from experience Speaks to the hearts of those younger, A subtle metaphor of what is Truly lasting and genuine. I watch her sleep, my grandmother, Once so loquacious and effervescent So active, and so loving, Now quiet and sober. Saying little when awake, and hearing even less, And I wonder. What does she see behind those unseeing eyes? Is she frightened inside the unnatural silence Of near-deaf ears? Her mind is still sharp, But is that a help or a hindrance In a failing body that no longer does its bidding? Does death frighten her, or Is she calling for it to come take her by the hand? I want to ask her, my grandmother. We could always talk, she and I. But this matter is not my business. It is not my turn, And if I were to ask her, She would tell me that I cannot know Until it is my time. Although I am long grown up, To her, I am but a child Who must stay in a child’s place for the moment. So I sit, and I watch over her, As she once watched over me. And I think and I wonder, Pretending that I wait for her to wake, But secretly wishing her a gentle release While she peacefully slumbers. |