The Goldfish
In the time of the beginning of the end
of my first marriage, we lived on the ground floor
of a brownstone that was painted pale pink;
in back, we tended a small garden, enclosed
by high walls.
In summer, we grew roses and tomatoes,
fed the fish in our small pond. In winter,
my children and I saw our forgotten goldfish
beneath the ice of the pond, mouths gaping,
mandarin orange scales garish against the white.
In spring, they thawed out, like a resurrection,
like dreams of what love once felt like. That winter,
under the ice, they had just enough oxygen
to stay alive.
**
Published by Calyx Literary Journal 2017
In the time of the beginning of the end
of my first marriage, we lived on the ground floor
of a brownstone that was painted pale pink;
in back, we tended a small garden, enclosed
by high walls.
In summer, we grew roses and tomatoes,
fed the fish in our small pond. In winter,
my children and I saw our forgotten goldfish
beneath the ice of the pond, mouths gaping,
mandarin orange scales garish against the white.
In spring, they thawed out, like a resurrection,
like dreams of what love once felt like. That winter,
under the ice, they had just enough oxygen
to stay alive.
**
Published by Calyx Literary Journal 2017