“Purling Lessons,” New Era, Aug. 1996, 24
Purling Lessons
When thinking of summer
My mind greets the cracked, hot earth
Like my grandmother’s hands,
Slipping two lightning-blue needles
Into my clammy white palms.
Her worn, yellowed fingers
Slowly molded my hands
Around the soft yarn,
Weaving twilight knots
That vanished when I was alone.
She brought out her basket,
A cloud of intricate designs
Whispering a woodwind voice in my ear:
“This one is for your family next Christmas.”
Her hands held a thin cobweb of cloth
Fluid and familiar as rich brown milk.
“Don’t tell them about it; it’s a surprise.”
I kept the secret (maybe too well);
Time wears hard on such things
After cocooning within it by firelight,
Finding a handy tent within its folds
Or mashing it together for a pillow;
Time can surely wear hard—
But I remember, Grandmother.
It rests on my bed now;
The fringe is no longer a feathered mist;
Its pattern waltzes madly about,
But I remember—
I remember needles dancing,
Reflecting the suns of summers past,
The bright sharp shards of memory,
And two gnarled hands
Creating beauty, like magic, from nothing.