Poetry

“The Tide Comes In,” “Sorrow,” and “Tough”

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Image by Nathan Anderson @ Unsplash+

The Tide Comes In

We saunter along the shore,

boys trailing behind.

Tender dusk, the wind

a sigh as we skip stones,

stride briskly between

the bulky boulders, climb and leap.

The surf tickles our toes.

We glance to the left, note the high

bluff and nowhere –

two little ones in tow – to go.

Over our right shoulders…

the white-tipped sea.

Too far

from where we began.

we scoop up the lads,

one in each pair of arms,

wade forward, urgent feet soaked,

knees submerged, shadows fading.

Fraught, we spy a path up the hill,

faint and worn, slippery and steep.

We climb—panting, fearful, fearless,

clutching our young treasures,

our quadrille breath

shallow and ragged.

At the top of the bluff we

pivot  and look toward

the dim horizon.

We stand, our children

between us, circle back

and tread the dry, high trail home.

Sorrow

Sorrow had not yet visited me.

Shades of it sifted through my father’s stories,

the beleaguered look in my mother’s eyes as she watched

her wild, enchanted life grow dim.

Sorrow teased me with the loss of aged aunts,

both grandmothers, a menagerie of creatures—

lizards, frogs, parakeets, turtles, Easter chickadees,

my dog. Sorrow pricks which pierced, sorrow shrouds

which hovered but did not descend, did not destroy.

Not me. Not us.

My beloved and I were unencumbered,

possessing only one another.

We wandered away—joyful, buoyant,

waltzing, wandering into other cultures,

other worlds, confident sorrow would avoid us.

But there was no avoidance, only delay,

until inch by inch, moment by moment,

sorrow grew near

and moved right in.

Tough

It was tough

when he was sick

and dying.

The illness—terminal

and the dying—slow,

rattled our lives undone

until nothing, not a thing,

not a single solitary thing

was normal anymore.

Not waking up, not morning

tasks, not meals, not work,

not life so sweet and chaotic

with children and cats and

friends and old, falling down

house we didn’t own.

And after…

after he died and there were

four of us and a steadily

growing number of cats,

nothing, not a thing

was normal or ordinary

or even expected.

It was all up for

grabs and tragedy and the

worst—the very worst—

that could befall our

little, fragile, blasted,

torn to bits

family.

About the Author

Molly Seale

Molly Seale has published memoir, essays, short stories and poems in a variety of publications, including Hippocampus Magazine, Hotel Amerika, New Millennium Writings, Connotation Press, Into the Sun, and The Write Launch. She holds an MFA in Theatre from The University of Texas, Austin and lives in Makanda, Illinois.