HERE’S MY UNCLE MILTIE
And his wife, my Aunt Flo
Last seen apart,
But together again for our reunion
And there, my Uncle Marty,
Quiet now as he always was
Testament to the quiet heroes
Sent to fight Hitler and rescue Europe
Home now, here in New Jersey
Waiting for his bride, my Aunt Rita
Who finally, after 50 long years
Is ready to rejoin her lost love
And take her place in our fallen family
Rita, whose passing has called us all,
The survivors and the caretakers
To gather in solemn reunion
On this hill in New Jersey
Amongst our family of Stones
SUCH A STRANGE PLACE
For a family reunion,
This bare windy Hill
In Northern New Jersey
A Jewish cemetery filled to its heights
With loved ones and familiar names
Who populated my childhood
With smiles, laughter
And loving embraces
A childhood where each was a god
As adults will seem in a child’s world
But gods no more, here on this hill
Gone, and some only hazily recalled
Resting now and waiting,
All of them fallen under the weight
Of well- or poorly-lived lives
Patiently they wait beneath their stones
For the next generation
My cousins and I, to join them
Here amongst the Stones.
I STAND HERE, ALWAYS A CHILD
Staring down at the graves
Of my father and mother
Both gone long enough
That I forget the sadness
That once blinded my eyes
And filled my lungs
I place stones on their stones
To let them know
My love holds fast and true
Even if memory dims
Some of my treasured images
Old as I am or will become
I will always be their son
Even on this hill in New Jersey
Here amongst the Stones
The silent Stones.