One Last Moonlight


Another owner of my mother's original home had built a new house, and the old one was going to be torn down. Before that happened, the owner contacted the family members who had lived there and invited them for one last look. 

This is what I wrote after I'd learned of the last visit. It was about that house that I visited as a child, what I remembered, and what I thought might have happened in the mean time


One last moonlight


A vacant house         
dim as moonlight’s glow    
in its west windows
bare of brocade and lace

once a proud house
shelter from the heat and cold
rain and snow
hosting games of hide and seek
laughter and song
Sunday family dinner
its doorpost etched with children’s growth
a notch for every measure
wooden stairs worn smooth
by a hundred pairs of feet
tearful good-byes at the front door

thistle and wild carrot grow
where civilized gardens flourished
a leaning picket fence weathered down to its wood

it’s a sad house
naked before the wrecking ball
sagging roof and weeping foundation
peeling paint and chipping plaster

tonight
the man in the moon
gazes lovingly upon the house
that tomorrow will render to
memory

© Carolyn Wilker





Tower Poetry, summer edition 2005 Vol. 54  No. 1

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