A happier ending

Poetry | Posted by Jannie on 7 January 2009 @ 6:25 AM (49) Comments

photo by Jannie, 2004

 

(upon discovering Sylvia Plath)

 

I was a mere spring and half a summer away from

becoming flesh the day you laid out bread and milk

and sealed off your kitchen to inhale your final solution.

 

I didn’t even realize until my coffee chat with Bridget

the other day that you lived and died a full hundred

years later than I waywardly assumed you had.

 

Surely poets didn’t suicide themselves in 1963?

 

1863 — 1763 — I could see.  But 1963?

 

Yet you did.

 

And I wonder was your life

like a grasshopper’s on a

windshield at sixty mph,

 

like an uprooted sapling’s who

can’t speak the foreign tongue

of discontinued seasons?

 

Hanging on for dear life

from the rafters of childhood,

from the meat hooks of love,

from the blackness of red tulips,

who knows what night you knew?

 

Ah, gone lady, had we been girls

of beach summers and winter woods

together, I would’ve shown you how to

laugh and wear your hat like starshine,

how to skip the flattest round stones

and joke about moons over tea,

 

every day a small miracle hanging

like children in park swings,

like bras in happy trees.