so sweet of you to leave behind a paper jot for me to find
for ev’ry breakfast lunch and tea gone missing since you married me;
- however -
such wilfulness I do condemn each crust and crumb, each stone and stem,
each potluck plum purloined at night to satisfy your appetite;
this doctor’s wife has had her fill of poetry and bitter pills,
and crumpled drafts in juicy scrawl appended to the icebox door;
your words do not a meal make how many more must I forsake
- meals, that is -
before your page is fit for press and I can sup on more…not less
love, floss
ps dinner’s in the oven, probably
A creative writing course exercise in found poetry. Williams married Florence “Flossie” Herman in 1912 and became the town doctor in Rutherford, New Jersey. Despite the time commitment, Williams continued as a full-time doctor while writing his poetry, benefiting from the financial stability it offered.
‘I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox
and which you were probably saving for breakfast
Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold’ - William Carlos Williams, “This Is Just To Say”