The Sixties [by Bill Wadsworth]

WadsoThe Sixties

 

The cruelties of April

            and mornings in America still

                        reverberate even now

on the further side of the hill

            with our sixties behind us

                        and the day getting late

and the old wars behind us

            and our hair turned white

                        there's a late snowfall

melting fast into the Hoosic

            River there's a natural bridge

                        the water rushes below and through

and down over ledges into a gorge

            so deep no one can see how

                        it ends or if it ends at all

(4//22/23)

"The Sixties" is a 15-line sonnet written in response to a birthday sonnet sent to me by my old friend and collaborator David Lehman.  The poem looks back to the historical experience we've shared, and forward to the time when inevitably we ourselves will be history. 

— Bill Wadsworth