The persons we are when we are young are probably buried somewhere within us when we’ve grown old.
Two Gates
I look through glass and see a young woman of twenty,
washing dishes,
and the window turns into a painting.
She is myself thirty years ago.
She holds the same blue bowls and brass teapot
I still own. I see her
outline against lamplight;
she knows only her side of the pane. The
porch
where I stand is empty.
Sunlight fades. I hear water run in the sink as she
lowers her head, blind to the future. She does not imagine I exist.
I step forward for a better look and she dissolves
into lumber and
paint. A gate I passed through to the next life
loses shape.
Once more I stand squared into the present,
among maple trees and
scissor-tailed birds,
in a garden, almost a mother to that faint,
distant woman.
© 2010 by Denise Low from her most recent book of poetry "Ghost of the New West", Woodley Memorial Press, 2010
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