by Carol Barrett
two years. Too painful, you said, firstborn
among the six of us. The sunny afternoon
we gathered to place Mom’s ashes beneath
rhododendrons Dad had grown, transplanted
now to our brother’s hill overlooking
the valley crowned by St. Helen’s, mist
confined to a white path along the Columbia
far below – which word is hard to bear?
Or does the pain endure because Dad was waiting,
his ashes already nourishing those lush rhodies,
his bones finally ready for hers? Tears help wash
away the wound of absence, memory carrying us
deep in these woods to Beaver Dam, to the young
alders you and I felled to help Dad clear the land,
house going up, cedar boards nailed into closets.
I know not what cushion two years give you,
there in her crossing over, and in his.
I departed too soon, my goodbyes spoken
at church, yours murmured as you slipped
drops of morphine under her tongue.
Two years may bring other reasons to make
our way down a woodsy slope, lift our eyes
to the heavens, the air damp with recent rain,
receiving such gifts we are given, poems —
magenta blooms from another time.
Carol Barrett has published three volumes of poetry, most recently READING WIND, and one of creative nonfiction. An NEA Fellow in Poetry, she has lived in nine states and in England. Carol's poems appear in JAMA, The Women's Review of Books, Nimrod, Poetry International, and in over sixty anthologies.