LINES WRITTEN
THE DAY AFTER VIRGINIA ’S
GRADUATION, MAY 30, 1984
The gym is empty
now--
Graduation was
last night.
The polished
floor is lightly scuffed
By the shoes of
girls in long white dresses:
The rented
chairs are stacked against the wall,
And beside them
yesterday’s magnolias and
My orange
extension cord
And the
discarded programs,
Where you said
they’d be.
Last night I
shared my daughter’s joy
With the
calmness of a minister at a wedding,
Or a
funeral:
A school man on
a working day.
But something
has come to me today,
Walking the
halls,
Picking up after
graduation:
Here is where
she stood last night to give her speech,
And here is
where she sat laying out the newspaper,
And here her
desk for calculus or English,
Or where she
tried out for cheerleader:
And here are all
the places of the part of her life
We thought was
ours
But is no
more.
An empty school,
the day after graduation,
In the cool and
eerie light of the sun’s eclipse--
They say this
will not happen again
For thirty years
or so:
I wonder if I
shall see it.
The men are
moving the rented organ now,
And I suppose
that if I leave the flowers where they are today
They will still
be there in September,
Dried, brittle,
incongruous against the opening of school.
It has dawned on
me thorough this day’s strange, dream-like light
That I have
indeed lived to see her coming forth:
My tears belong
to ritual,
As you said they
would.
It has dawned on
me through this day’s strange, dream-like light
That
Virginia doesn’t go to school here
anymore.
The men carrying
away the rented chairs
Disrupt the
practice of the cheerleaders:
My younger
daughter squints in the now-bright sun of noontime
And plans with
friends for other days.
- Robert H. Demaree Jr., 2012
Robert retired in
2001 after 42 years as a teacher and administrator in schools in the
Southeastern
U.S. He has family
ties to North
Carolina , Pennsylvania and New
Hampshire ; thus he hopes that his interest in what Donald
Hall calls “a pleasure of place” does not preclude a look at a larger
landscape.
No comments:
Post a Comment