Iphigene Here.
A few Poetry Friday’s ago I posted an original poem entitled An Unsent Letter to the Widow. The reception to the poem was warm and has motivated me to share for today’s Poetry Friday (as hosted by Sherry of Semicolon) the companion poem to it.
When someone dies we build relationships with people who share memories of the one who passed away. That shared experience, that sentiment can bloom to a new connection. In A Widow’s Reply I thought of how she would receive the letter, would she notice that the writer (her husband’s friend) was holding back so much more than he could say? I thought of how they can keep the relationships forged earlier on when the husband was living and clumsily sustained after.
Once again, this is a COMPANION POEM, if you haven’t read the first one, feel free to visit it here.
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Note: Hyphens were placed to indicate space. WordPress has been acting up and I can’t seem to get it give me spaces between stanzas.
A Widow’s Reply©
Do you eat well? Or has depression
Overtake you? He used to boast of your words—
Poetic, flowery, alive and bursting
With images he can barely describe,
But your letters,
They’ve gone dry.
He’d force you to write lines
For him, to tell me of the day’s
Toil and routine
For he knew you’d find the way
To make today,
Not like any other day.
–
How my child would love
To hear you speak of the sunlight,
The lady sweeping the streets,
Or the man on his bicycle
Pedaling to the sound of an old
Sinatra song. But how can I impose,
Your letters, though civil,
Lukewarm and proper have
Filled the void of my mailbox—
He used to fill it so.
–
And though strange lands you’ve
Gone have left you with no words,
I wish you more—
For you are no widow, though friend
You loss, need you suffer like me?
He would have love to see you married,
Run away with a blushing bride
And I’d be there, like he’d be
At your side. Go!
out and enough
With your somber life!
–
I say this with affection,
As a sister to a brother she
Has long not seen. Find solace in this,
That though your nights may be cold
And the mornings hard to go by,
That I wait,
here for your letters,
And know,
You have so much more.
–
Much more than your tempered letters
Could say.
——
Hi, Iphigene. Thanks for this post. My friend lost her mother unexpectedly last week and the nature of grief has been on my mind. William Carlos Williams has a beautiful poem on this subject. “The Widow’s Lament in Springtime.” The poem you shared is new to me.
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Hi Laura,
You are MOST welcome. I’m glad you enjoyed this little original poem.
Thanks for visiting.
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The person speaking in the poem shows such warmth for his friend’s wife, sharing concern for her more than his own grief. Thanks, Iphigene, a good pair of thoughtful posts!
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Hi Linda,
Thanks very much for visiting. I am very glad that you enjoyed this poem and its partner.
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Aww, she really didn’t understand his letter. Or maybe she got it and she’s not interested: “As a sister to a brother.” Poor guy.
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Hahaha. Tabatha.
Well, the earlier poem was an unsent letter. So, he really is a poor guy. 🙂
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