The Poetry of Grief

Eugenia and Wilmer Hunt circa 1931
Eugenia and Wilmer Hunt, 1931

The poem that follows was written by my mother. My dad died in his sleep – just before dawn we believe – in his bedroom connected to hers. She wrote it, as she described in her journal, “On my way to Boston October 30, 1984.” She was coming to visit Springer, Chris and me in the house we built near Burlington, Vermont. ~Sperry Hunt, April, 2021

1982 The Death of My Love

By Eugenia Howard Hunt

One morning as the

Sun reproved the night 

With light

I walked on bare feet

To the front of your bed

You lay like an El Greco

Thin elegant face to the East

The right hand cupped out 

Across the white sheets

Winding around your long limbs

Such curve of beauty

I could see slits of blue

Through your eyes

Your cheeks still flushed

I called gently your name

You light sleeper always

But now that body

That always responded to my love

Was vacant of its soul

Left me a few minutes earlier

I still called out your name

Then I knew and stayed

With you a while

The last time you were mine 

Alone

Later that morning I walked by a copse of trees

There was no wind

But the copse revolved

It rustled and I knew

Your soul had sought 

Its God

And now I am too alone

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