“Perspective,” New Era, Aug. 1976, 20
Perspective
Along with a bundle of letters
addressed in faded fountain pen to
a Miss June Tanner
and stamped with purple Benjamin Franklins,
A tarnished brooch, bird-shaped,
missing the eye stone,
And a leatherbound diary,
including news clippings, pressed flowers—
I found a photograph
of a little boy, freckled and
missing a front tooth from his smile,
My name and the date
penned on the back.
Like seeing an old schoolmate
for the first time in years,
it was a little awkward—
He, in Mom’s keepsake box,
wearing a sheepish first-grade grin;
I, fascinated by his familiar
red shirt and black-rimmed glasses
(held together on one side by wire and Magic Mending Tape)—
But I found myself
liking his daguerreotype quietness,
at ease in his stillness
and the way he was content to just grin,
So I didn’t press for details
but wiped off his dust veneer
and retucked him away,
feeling very old
for being
thirteen …