ON LINE AT THE A&P
The old lady was a short, squat androgynous
type, with fortune teller eyes, black loam
beneath fingernails, straggling white hairs
around a sagging chin and the gravelly voice
of barmaid at the Poitin Still Irish Pub.
Drooping drab grey garments made
her resemble a medieval peasant who
stepped out of a Brueghel’s painting
walking along cobblestones shopping
on the Friday market of central Ghent.
She began talking to me as if I was
an old friend, about how good she felt
about spring and all, days much warmer,
light much longer, everything blooming,
especially her asparagus magically appearing
each year.
If she didn’t pick them right away
their wildness would spread like kudzu
or bamboo, their tufted, wispy ends
leaning over from their own weight,
a welcome addition to her garden she thought.
“Isn’t that Diane at the register
she asked?” as tremulous fingers
counted dollar bills from a vintage
beaded purse.
She hoisted packages with surprising strength,
bidding me adieu as she mounted an ox cart.