American Life in Poetry: Column 067
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006
One in a series of elegies by New York City poet Catherine Barnett, this poem
describes the first gathering after death has shaken a family to its core. The
father tries to help his grown daughter forget for a moment that, a year earlier,
her own two daughters were killed, that she is now alone. He’s heartsick, realizing
that drinking can only momentarily ease her pain, a pain and love that takes hold of
the entire family. The children who join her in the field are silent guardians.
Family Reunion
My father scolded us all for refusing his liquor.
He kept buying tequila, and steak for the grill,
until finally we joined him, making margaritas,
cutting the fat off the bone.
When he saw how we drank, my sister
shredding the black labels into her glass
while his remaining grandchildren
dragged their thin bunk bed mattresses
first out to the lawn to play
then farther up the field to sleep next to her,
I think it was then he changed,
something in him died. He’s gentler now,
quiet, losing weight though every night
he eats the same ice cream he always ate
only now he’s not drinking,
he doesn’t fall asleep with the spoon in his hand,
he waits for my mother to come lie down with him.
Reprinted from “Into Perfect Spheres Such Holes Are Pierced,” Alice James Books,
2004, by permission of the author. Copyright (c) 2004 by Catherine Barnett. This
weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and
the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. This column does
not accept unsolicited poetry.
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