REUTEMANN ROAD POEMS: MY GRANDFATHER’S HOUSE

 MY GRANDFATHER’S HOUSE

Under the hydrangeas on the front lawn

I played with little dolls, the ones

You cut dresses for out of sewing scraps,

Envying my cousins their sibling

Camaraderie.  Blackberries bubbled

In pastures overgrown with birches

Where no wolves loitered and rose

Again at breakfast dewy with cream.

The linoleum was cool under feet admonished

To wear sandals.  Sunlight baptized

The dining room and half an acre

Of canning vegetables and cucumbers

To be salt-layered in crocks.  Roosters

With a glad cry woke me on the airy

Piazza where insects ticking on screens

Had lulled me to sleep.  My humpty-dumpty

Grandfather brought four daughters and

Eliza Jane down from New Brunswick

To start a new century in a new land.

A master carpenter, he built their house

Commodious with indoor plumbing.  My

Youngest aunt was married in the parlor

While I, a flower girl with stage fright,

Cried on the oak stairs.  By that front

Window my grandmother’s cheek

Was granite under my lips when Aunt

Pearl led me to her coffin.  “Let

Your vittles shut your mouths,” Grandpa

Advised his grandchildren at the table.

Every Thanksgiving the hydrangeas were brittle

Brown cotton candy on fragile sticks.

 

Comments

2 responses to “REUTEMANN ROAD POEMS: MY GRANDFATHER’S HOUSE”

  1. ST Avatar

    nice one Mom. Did you write this in N. Stonington?

    1. bevalan2@gmail.com Avatar
      bevalan2@gmail.com

      Yes I wrote it in the 60s. Had lost track of it until my cousin Jane sent it to me this week.

      Sent from my iPhone

      >

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