Showing posts with label deirdre o'connor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deirdre o'connor. Show all posts

1.30.2009

Egg Toss at the Family Reunion

You had to be underhanded. You had to toss
the egg gently to your partner and back up
after each catch. Two steps, I think,
and the lobbed egg falling towards you
made you back your body away from your hands,
cupped, as if waiting for a baby to drop
from the sky. The boys didn’t get very far,
in fact, seemed to like the bloodless
yolk on their fingers, the splattering catch.

I remember those picnics as if they were always
just before dusk, and I was always small
in brand new summer playclothes, blue stars
on red and white stripes, my parents side-lined among the adults
until each kid had had a fair chance.
Then even the elderly aunts would join in, the greats
and the great-greats, their thick shoes and floral knit dresses
unprotected, their soft, identical white hair,
their long faces and turned-up noses, like mine,
their ringed fingers, dead husbands, empty graves.

: Deirdre O’Connor, Before the Blue Hour (2002)