My father in
his dissolution
from dementia
once achieved,
it seemed to
me, a kind of mastery
one evening at
the dinner table
when, dressed-up
and looking
quite as if he
hadn’t changed at all –
this was four
years before his final fall --
his eyes familiarly
still bright –
he lightly purposed
to invite himself
into the conversation
in a spate
of fast
elastic syllables which signified
pure play,
beyond the bounds of content.
Alzheimer’s
can have a style.
I
stuttered badly when I was a child.
So
had he. Speech for him remained –
sometimes remains for me – a trial..
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