It’s true, sometimes the river can’t be wide enough
between me and you. God knows it’s cold in there.
And deep. And full of secrets I don’t ever want to know.
And that old bridge joining us, sometimes I pray it falls.
Tell myself it’s better that way, what, with you over there
and no way to get over here except to swim—and I know
you won’t do that. Yeah, I say, it’s better that way,
you and me just keeping our distance. In fact,
sometimes I pretend it’s gone already, that old bridge.
But then next thing I know, I’m making up smoke signals
to say hey, there’s a really pretty light on the water tonight,
and hey, I’m wishing you would tell me that story again, the one
your mama used to tell to you when you were scared.
And that’s when I know that if that bridge collapsed,
well, I would build a new one with all my resources—
my stubbornness, my hope, my hands. It is hard
to build a bridge out of stubbornness and hope.
But I would. Sometimes it’s all we have.
I like the way you flesh out your comments (viz ‘my resources’—my stubbornness, my hope, my hands) You make the poem more expressive by detailing these things. Good!
Thanks!
From: “comment-reply@wordpress.com” Reply-To: Date: Wednesday, March 18, 2015 at 11:35 AM To: Rosemerry Trommer Subject: [A Hundred Falling Veils] Comment: “How It Is We Stay Together”
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I see the bridge is on your mind, me noticing the Twenty years later poem first. Love that idea, to build a bridge out of stubbornness and hope. It would be equal to hickory!