Tuesday, January 4, 2011

dollhouse

We traveled back by motor boat
our bellies full of ice cream,
cherishing the last moments of quite a long day
at the beginning of what would be quite a short week.

It was the end of the summer,
and, for us, the end of the summer
might as well have meant the end.

By August, our time together was all we remembered knowing.
Anything before was a blur;
perhaps important to us in some other life,
but irrelevant to this:

our era on the lake

an era that was quickly coming to a close.

So, we toured the lake.
We held our own sort of private parade
through dimly-lit water where we had spent a season in the sun.

It was dark, but we knew the way
back to the shore of our camp;
we could find it when we needed,
but we didn't need it quite yet.

Instead, we boldly pioneered into coves unfamiliar,
guided by the warm, yellow lights of homes along the shore.
I know that we passed window after window on that last voyage,

but I only recall seeing one.

As we drew near to the house, light from inside illuminated the whole structure
every chair
and table
and book
and shelf was revealed through
one
wide
pane
of glass,
stretching high above
the head of a man
sitting inside.

This dollhouse,
with walls cut away,
disclosed and betrayed
the private life of its inhabitant
confessed his secrets to us,
the silent tourists of the lake.

Did the man know he was being watched?
That his dollhouse was on display?

That I, from darkness, stared into his light
while he, from brightness, looked out upon the night?

1 comments:

Kristine said...

I love that last line! I feel compelled to make this a FB status...is that how we share genius with the world these days???