Poems ✍️

  23.10.2025
  10


Author: Thanksgiving Day

Thanksgiving for Two



 




By Marjorie Saiser








The adults we call our children will not be arriving

with their children in tow for Thanksgiving.

We must make our feast ourselves,


slice our half-ham, indulge, fill our plates,

potatoes and green beans

carried to our table near the window.


We are the feast, plenty of years,

arguments. I’m thinking the whole bundle of it

rolls out like a white tablecloth. We wanted


to be good company for one another.

Little did we know that first picnic

how this would go. Your hair was thick,


mine long and easy; we climbed a bluff

to look over a storybook plain. We chose

our spot as high as we could, to see


the river and the checkerboard fields.

What we didn’t see was this day, in

our pajamas if we want to,


wrinkled hands strong, wine

in juice glasses, toasting

whatever’s next,


the decades of side-by-side,

our great good luck.








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