A Month of Letters

I'm writing letters.


To an old friend who understands the missing pieces.


To a young friend I write: I don't have answers but here, consider this, and this, and maybe this.


To a niece.


To a poet.


To a student.


To a mother-in-law.


To myself.


Letters let us wonder and search, and sometimes declare.


You like letters, too? Please join me in A Month of Letters, a challenge presented by novelist (and letter writer) Mary Robinette Kowal.


 


Elegy for the Personal Letter  


I miss the rumpled corners of correspondence,


the ink blots and crossouts that show


someone lives on the other end, a person


whose hands make errors, leave traces.


I miss fine stationary, its raised elegant


lettering prominent on creamy shades of ivory


or pearl grey. I even miss hasty notes


dashed off on notebook paper, edges


ragged as their scribbled messages—


can't much write nowthinking of you.


When letters come now, they are formatted


by some distant computer, addressed


to Occupant or To the family living at


meager greetings at best,


salutations made by committee.


Among the glossy catalogs


and one time only offers


the bills and invoices,


letters arrive so rarely now that I drop


all other mail to the floor when


an envelope arrives and the handwriting


is actual handwriting, the return address


somewhere I can locate on any map.


So seldom is it that letters come


That I stop everything else


to identify the scrawl that has come this far—


the twist and the whirl of the letters,


the loops of the numerals. I open


those envelopes first, forgetting


the claim of any other mail,


hoping for news I could not read


in any other way but this.


 


— Allison Joseph


 


 

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Published on February 07, 2012 17:15
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