Tuesday morning at Four A.M. Gramma Smith turns over in bed, Awake too early once again. Her replaced hip complains And a cramp hides behind her knee And must be stretched and sent away
Fifteen minutes of not finding comfort Informs her that it’s time to get up. Legs hanging over the edge of the bed, She searches the darkness for strength, Knowing the minute she stands upright Her back will seize and shriek with pain.
It only lasts a little while Then settles into a bearable ache As she shambles to the Loo Before she can embarrass herself With leakage she cannot control The way she could when young.
Dry and on her feet again She finds the way to her desk, Blinking in the sudden light From two lamps that fight each other To chase away the shadows That would make it hard to see.
Picking up her favorite pen She starts to write a verse. It grows quickly as she settles in The chair that knows her shape so well, And ink flows at a satisfying pace To catch the words that tumble out.
But what she writes is this:
Where are all the butterflies And Humming Birds of my youth. Where are the lacy Sweet Peas And the taste of lemonade.
Where has all the music gone And groups of words that soar. Where are all the Chickadees And fleecy clouds at dawn.
She lays her pen aside and sighs. The glamour that was living, pales And leaves a morose gray behind. Her words are serviceable at best, And all the new ideas are old. So she gets up and limps away
To where the kitchen still respects her touch, And french toast is a panacea for her soul. She searches for the words that would not come And sips hot cocoa in vain hope That there will be a reason to go on And so the gun stays safely in the drawer. ljm
She is my favorite aunt and I worry about her and that gun.