Wedlock Sunday
she is working in the garden,
facing away from me,
trimming the bougainvillea,
still trim herself and youthful,
relaxed and free of cares,
doing something she enjoys,
something that she always has enjoyed,
and having lost all conception of
the passing of the hours,
and i feel a tenderness for her
that i may never have felt during
the selfish passion of young manhood,
and i wish the bitterness that
have more than merely punctuated
our thirty years together
could be magically obliterated
(which will never happen-let's
not kid ourselves-but perhaps for the
rest of this afternoon and evening
they will be.
i resolve to do and say
only kindesses to her
over dinner and in front of
the pbs mystery that we've been following
and not to react to
any sarcasms or schemes
she may slip into out of habit, hunger,
merlot, tiredness, or contemplation of
the work week's rattling hours
of third graders, parents, colleagues,
homework, grades, and art projects,
lying once again in wait for her.
"Wedlock Sunday" by Gerald Locklin
ah, that kills me. It's so bittersweet and pretty.
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