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Observations on leaving "the home" on a winter's evening. |
| Sundown The winter nakedness of trees shows off their bones, pen strokes against a darkening sky, their blackness backlit by the lowest cloud to hold a cup of sun. Old men lie adrift in their beds, famous battles of World War II flickering on the screen, a strident voice encouraging the valiant on—all background to vacant eyes it once entranced. Old women loll in chairs by the door. One cries out, “I don’t live here. Take me home.” Another smiles, holds out her doll. One with a canny grin points to a photo on her dresser. “I snapped that handsome boy up in a flash,” then sobs because, “I don’t know where he’s gone!” “Ten years dead,” her sister says. Old women want their mamas, their babies and their men. Old men long for glory, their courage, and the power that made them proud a long time ago. The sun descends below the land, then reemerges, hanging there, a rim of light, suspended, momentarily before it’s sucked down by the sky, a gentle death to day, its colors gone. |