Poem-a-Day - "Legacy" by Rhonda M. Ward

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August 4, 2020  

Legacy


Rhonda M. Ward

Now and then the phone will ring and it will be
someone from my youth. The voice of a favorite cousin
stretched across many miles sounding exactly as she always has:
that trained concentration of one who stutters—
the slight hesitations, the drawn-out syllables,
the occasional lapse into a stammer.

When asked, she says my aunt is well for her age but
she forgets. I remember the last time I saw my aunt—
leaning on her cane, skin smooth as river rock,
mahogany brown, gray hair braided into two plaits
stretched atop her head and held in place
with black bobby pins.

She called to say James Lee has died. And did I know
Aunt Mary, who had four crippled children
and went blind after uncle Benny died, died last year?

I did not.

We wander back awhile, reminding and remembering:

Me under the streetlight outside our front yard
face buried in the crook of my arm held close
to the telephone pole as I closed my eyes and sang the words:
Last night, night before, twenty-four robbers at my door
I got up to let them in... hit ‘em in the head with a rolling pin,
then counted up to ten while they ran and hid.

Visiting the graves of grandparents I never knew.
Placing blush-pink peonies my father grew and cut
for the occasion into mason jars. Saying nothing.
Simply staring at the way our lives come down
to a concrete slab.

Copyright © 2020 by Rhonda M. Ward. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 4, 2020, by the Academy of American Poets.

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Legacy’ is one of a series of poems that remind me where I came from. The many traditions that were a part of my youth included Memorial Day visits to the national cemetery where my maternal grandparents were buried. Legacy’ is also a reminder of the joys of childhood, the challenges of life, and the love of family.”
Rhonda M. Ward

Rhonda M. Ward lives and writes in New London, Connecticut, where she currently serves as the city’s inaugural Poet Laureate. Ward is the webmaster and publicist for the Institute of Materials Science at the University of Connecticut.

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Thanks to Marilyn Nelson, author of My Seneca Village (Namelos, 2015), who curated Poem-a-Day for August 2-August 14. Read a Q&A about Nelson’s curatorial approach and find out more about our guest editors for the year
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