Wilfred, poem by Sandra Giedeman

He was proud of his blue tick hounds, his


sixty acres of hills, hollows, creeks filled


with copperheads and cottonmouths;


nights utterly still except when a smell or sound


riled the hounds from their sleep


to bay like old mourners.


 


My uncle read aloud Sunday mornings


from the Book of Job in a nasal voice,


about hating the night and waiting for day


only to find in the day that one wished for night,


about how we are here for a flicker of time


then reflected in no one’s eye.


 


My aunt had the custom of hill people of keeping


framed photographs of dead relatives in their coffins.


When my uncle died she got rid of his hounds, his


jew’s harp, said she was through with men


and their ways, but she kept his death photo displayed


on a lace doily in her living room.


 


headshots 002Sandra Giedeman grew up in St. Louis and moved to California in her ‘20s. She’s been published in various literary journals and was awarded the Mudfish Annual Poetry Prize by Charles Simic.  She was owner of Upchurch-Brown Booksellers in Laguna Beach and past president of the Orange County Chapter of PEN. She worked as editor of various trade magazines. She lives in San Clemente, California with her husband.


 

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Published on April 16, 2013 06:00
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Rusty Barnes
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