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Aunt Marie’s Inner Life

As a girl my mother wore giant bows in her curly hair

that somehow stood right up on her head.

There she is, in photo after photo, next to my aunt

whose hair was straight and fine, whose head was bowless.

Later came the big extravagant hats with broad brims,

my aunt favoring pillbox hats and small velvet affairs with

little nets that came down over her face.  My mother

married my father, but Aunt Marie lived with her parents

and then just my grandmother her whole life

except for a short time she was in nursing school

when all the young women stayed in dormitories.

Once graduated, she seemed happy to return home

happy even to share the one bedroom of the small

apartment she and my grandmother rented

after my grandfather died.  One bedroom.

My aunt’s inner life remains a mystery.

Was there really no romance in her, ever?

No longing?  Did she truly never pine?

It appears anyway that she did not, a bafflement

to one who longed and pined and wished

and hoped for so many years, frittering away the

full, fertile hours on who when and why not.

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Wild Bergamot

The wild bergamot I have noted

is a lovely shape for a hat

a squat thing with crazy skinny

plumes erupting from its top

a lavendar color that while nice

for a flower would have to be changed

to red or black possibly purple

but the shape oh the shape cries out

to be made into a hat!

Alas I am no hatmaker

though my long gone

Great Aunt Elizabeth

did go to millinery school

according to my grandmother

because she talked too much

in regular school and was kicked out

finishing only the sixth grade.

I would like to know now if this story

is true but there is no one left to ask

and now I note with some longing

that wild bergamot is a very lovely

shape for a hat and if I were a

hatmaker I would certainly make one.

 

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Full Moon

In the middle of the ocean of sky sat

that unflappable moon full as a peach.

I dreamed it was surrounded by great

elliptical rings like the rings of Saturn.

Everyone even the nightingale even

the crying babies hushed as whole

towns fell silent watching.

Fireflies left off their flashing.

Stars quietly turned off their lights.

Clouds flung themselves away.

As if on cue a drift of wisdom

settled upon the heads of All

like soft felt hats.

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If

I do not like money and there’s the rub

the reason, I imagine, that I do not have it.

However I do like Things and that includes

of course the things money cannot buy but

also those it can, for example

party dresses and fancy shoes

windows that slide up and down

open and close

doors that shut properly

hats

airline tickets

bottles of champagne

books baubles chocolates in boxes

a roof that never leaks

and oh if I had a bit more money

maybe just one more dog.

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The Estate Sale

At the estate sale we go through someone

else’s things, finger the linens, admire the

silver, the bone china, run our hands over

the smooth walnut table, the lovely corner

cabinet, rummage through the box of

old dance cards–1914!–the baby clothes

stiff with age, the tattered prints, maps,

postcards, memorabilia from so many

events and travels.  We thumb through

the dusted off books, ooh and ahh over

the fancy ladies’ gloves, sort through the

old photographs, try on the hats, admire

the handiwork on pillowcases, tablecloths,

needlepoint. We are on a journey through

someone else’s life with only these

artifacts for clues, no narrative, no family,

no one here to tell her story.  For example,

what became of Mr. Mann, whose name

appears on a February 1, 1915 dance card,

who asked her to save him a place for a

whirl around the floor to “Poor Pauline?”

Did he bow and kiss her hand when the

dance ended, did a romance ensue?

We don’t know the color of her eyes

(or his), the sound of her laughter, her

loves and losses, whether her dreams

came true, how many children she had

(if any) and why oh why they would

have let all these precious things of hers

leave the house with strangers.

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Gay and Carefree

My mother and my aunt traveled together
with girlfriends when they were young.
Canada, Lake Louise, Banff, Lake Michigan.
Photos show them on beaches laughing
gay carefree my mother beautiful.
Fur coat, marvelous hats, the velvet beaded jacket.
She lived at home, spent her own money on these things.
I remember the words Baked Alaska, chateaubriand.
Cigarettes smoked on the beach, escapades
in Ginny’s car, Bridge Club luncheons.
When my mother was old, her memory failing, it was this
time of her life she seemed to remember best
always with a fond smile.  Her young woman’s freedom.
She married my father, left St. Louis had seven babies
in ten years.  Gone were the hats, the two-piece bathing suit.
She sewed clothes for us on a tiny budget.  
I cannot say how happy she was or wasn’t.