An Old Photograph

George Trialonis

    Despite the blur and lag of forty years,

    this photograph of women five 
    the four in black and gray
    and just as old as hills with caps of snow in May,
    and one, the young, inclined her bel esprit to hide 
    brings back a lot of memories and tears.

    With crochet hooks and needles long in hand,
    they sat on wicker chairs across my home
    and knitted yarns and gossiped as in band,
     O my, isn t she a cow and he a gnome!
    about an oddly looking couple under public gaze,
    but never meant to offend a soul in fulsome praise.

    And I, a boy engrossed in prankish play,
    would sneak behind their backs to cut with shears
    I used in art  to their subdued dismay,
    the yarns squirming up from sluggish skeins
    to slothful fingers wrestling hooks and needles
    for slip knots and cast ons and stitches.

    Until one summer day the young
    caught me in the act and spoke in bitter tongue:
     Our lives are yarns or threads inclined to snap
    while weaving patterns by Design
    to which all must needs one day resign.
    Even the bad and the good and the worst and the best
    can not evade or skirt this High and Nigh Behest
    entrusted with the Fates whose task is time impressed
    (to goad people to their timely bane).
    Now, if you, a boy as pure in heart as pain & ,
    insist on your portentous play and us to harass
    the Fates will surely follow suit  alas!
    and cut our threads before our time comes.

    

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