Thursday, October 03, 2002

"A Poem for Emily," by Miller Williams from Living on the Sun Face (Louisiana State University Press).

    A Poem for Emily

    Small fact and fingers and farthest one from me,
    a hand's width and two generations away,
    in this still present I am fifty-three.
    You are not yet a full day.

    When I am sixty-three, when you are ten,
    and you are neither closer nor as far,
    your arms will fill with what you know by then,
    the arithmetic and love we do and are.

    When I by blood and luck am eighty-six
    and you are someplace else and thirty-three
    believing in sex and god and politics
    with children who look not at all like me,

    sometime I know you will have read them this
    so they will know I love them and say so
    and love their mother. Child, whatever is
    is always or never was. Long ago,

    a day I watched awhile beside your bed,
    I wrote this down, a thing that might be kept
    awhile, to tell you what I would have said
    when you were who knows what and I was dead
    which is I stood and loved you while you slept.

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