
When companionship comes in the hum of the Frigidaire,
Sarah spills a mound of dough on a board
swathed in flour as fine as the frost
on winter windows waiting for mid-day sun.
That noonday will bloom over her backyard,
low in branches of the persimmon tree
where feeders hang like pendulums for chickadees.
Here the dough waits for her palms pushing
it into submission, her hands and the yielding dough
in an agreed upon attraction. It wants to rise
slowly as an old hound, having curled within
its nest of a bed, yawns itself to life.
And the loaf she forms, it too knows
her longing for crusts and butter melting.

January 2019
Mary,
Thanks for the lovely poem as this morning I feel like an old hound rising from my bed! Such beautiful imagery and perfect for this cold, gray day. Warm hugs to you.
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Mary,
Your poetry is amazing. You may be “after seventy” but your mind has the clarity of a young person.
Sylvia
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L
sent from tiny keyboard
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