Discarding. Cleaning. Sorting. Unpleasant, tedious tasks, true, but sometimes, among the dust, the dirt, the ancient bank statements, the Post-Its that no longer stick, one finds jewels. Yes, indeedy.
'56
Snapshot
They stand
Together
In black and white.
He is lean.
A strand of linguine
In faded jeans,
And scuffed boots,
Hair as springy as risen dough.
She is curvy.
A bottle of Youth-Dew perfume.
Her smile is radiant,
As full of promise,
As a red-leafed shoot on a rosebush.
His arms envelop her.
His chin rests on her shoulder.
Her chin tilts skyward,
a haughty falcon
atop the Chrysler Building.
She is
Defiant.
Her eyes flash:
I
will choose
who I love.
His grin boasts:
I am the cat.
I have the canary.
They stand.
Together.
They dare the future.
Black and white.
And gray.
(And soon, Ms. Still Life In Buenos Aires, I will tell all I know about self-tanning lotions. Because you asked. And I will deliver. Soon.)


Wow...I get lots of treats today. A stunning picture, beautiful poem, and the promise the tanning lotion story.
Seriously though, that's a great poem, especially the strand of linguine and cat analogies. And like a poem ought to, the last line gives me chills...
Posted by: Still Life in Buenos Aires | October 30, 2008 at 04:57 PM
I have a similar picture of my own parents. Oh, how I wish they could stay young.
Posted by: Meg | November 01, 2008 at 04:02 PM
So very glad you like the poem. Thank you.
Posted by: Denise Calhoun | November 02, 2008 at 07:07 PM
How sweet. Love the photo and the poem. Wasn't your mom a doll!!!
Posted by: Lisa | November 07, 2008 at 12:11 PM