I carry many of Rhina's poems in my heart, but "Their Only Child," posted by Gail, has a special place there. I like to imagine that someday my daughter, also the one who didn’t get away, will see herself in it.
"Practice" is another favorite of mine. "Picture this pair," it begins, and reading the poem is like watching a scene from a film, the characters and their gestures are so deftly drawn. And I love the ending.
Practice
Picture this pair: eleven-year-old boy,
nine-year-old sister; we old folks ahead,
strolling between azaleas and a bed
of tulips he refuses to enjoy
because she wants him to. She spots a kite
wrestling pine branches; wordlessly, aloof,
he looks the other way, for further proof
of his contempt spins on his heel and right
into the woods we skirt. This walk is her
choice, and he's come against his will, is stone-
dense with fury, wants it to be known,
known and remembered. Old folks who prefer
peace to the truth — in fact, to everything —
we stay ahead. But she persists, looks over
her shoulder, offering feathers, pebbles, clover,
regrets her morning wish to walk in spring
now that he will not warm to her. Poor girl —
I think — transforming even now to suit
some other who draws back, passive and mute
and strong, wielding his silence and the curl
of his small lip — but no, she'll come to learn
to be a little hard herself, need less
another's pleasure than her own, to press
ahead alone and happy and not turn.
from Rehearsing Absence
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