Selling the House

MaidatStream.jpg

Selling the House
by Charles L. Cingolani



What will happen to the paintings
when the house is up for sale
and an auction's taking place?

Will strangers stand around
on hardwood floors
twisting scratches into varnished oak
as bids dislodge our silent storytellers
from walls they spoke from
through windows opening out
on worlds we longed for
and dreamed about?

Ah, won't all those
hand-clasped chins thrown back
and judgment noddings
frighten our poor shy
Maiden at the Stream
fetching water as she did
for us daily to watch
teaching us what beauty was
and what it meant for us?

Had ever a day passed
without our glancing up at her
gladdened by her being there
and being one of us?

Oh, won't we stand there saddened then
staring at hooks and nails
in empty faded rectangles and squares
regretting having let the paintings go,
won't we be taken aback
when feisty bargainers
stand sceptically inquiring
before making each prize their own
then rushing off with it
heedless of the pain that cost us,
alone delighted with their success?


Source

 

Well that brought back some memories. To this day, I wonder what happened to the painting of a young Victorian Era girl holding a giant white rabbit on her lap, that hung in one of the bedrooms of my maternal grandmother's farm house.

I was to receive that painting but the Greedy Uncles saw to it that those who lived closest to Grandma when she passed, got (and sold) anything and everything, regardless of monetary or intrinsic value. Lovely lot of men, so they were----------------

A few years back I found a similar (and much smaller) painting of a young Victorian Era girl sort of dangling a cat, the way children are prone to do and not mean harm to them. I paid way too much money for it, re-framed it in a more suitable frame, and it now sits atop the tall chest of drawers.
 
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Selling the House
by Charles L. Cingolani



What will happen to the paintings
when the house is up for sale
and an auction's taking place?

Will strangers stand around
on hardwood floors
twisting scratches into varnished oak
as bids dislodge our silent storytellers
from walls they spoke from
through windows opening out
on worlds we longed for
and dreamed about?

Ah, won't all those
hand-clasped chins thrown back
and judgment noddings
frighten our poor shy
Maiden at the Stream
fetching water as she did
for us daily to watch
teaching us what beauty was
and what it meant for us?

Had ever a day passed
without our glancing up at her
gladdened by her being there
and being one of us?

Oh, won't we stand there saddened then
staring at hooks and nails
in empty faded rectangles and squares
regretting having let the paintings go,
won't we be taken aback
when feisty bargainers
stand sceptically inquiring
before making each prize their own
then rushing off with it
heedless of the pain that cost us,
alone delighted with their success?


Source


Nicely written.
You know a poem is good when you're left with a heavy heart and searching your own memory for several moments.
 


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