prince edward island
Prince Edward Island
For my cousin, Laurel, on her 60th birthday
From the family gravestone at St John’s Presbyterian Chuch:
“Tho’ lost to sight, to memory dear,”
Daniel MacLeod (1863 – 1927)
Flora Murchison MacLeod (1869 – 1956)
Katherine MacLeod MacDonald (1894 – 1989)
John Glenn MacDonald (1928 – 2009)
June MacDonald Young (1935 – 2016)
How deeply stored, the memory of those tunes:
Road to the Isle, Red Wing, and St. Anne’s Reel—
my long-limbed uncle,
worn cuff of his plaid shirt,
large hand swaying the bow,
fiddle cuddled warm to his cheek,
almost a smile.
My cousin and I walk miles of rippled clay,
between sea and pointed fir,
past the red soil fields of our great-grandparents’ farm.
Our grandmother, strong bear of a girl,
worked alongside her father and five brothers, set potatoes
in that white shed right there, and rode Point Prim Bird,
hard as that horse could run; while inside her six sisters
baked breads and pies, stirred stews, roasted one hen to feed 14,
hung sheets and long johns for tall brothers who slept
head to toe on the attic floor.
Still, the white church steeple points in October blue skies.
Sunday mornings, they crowded and clonked
in horse and wagon, baskets of dinner, blankets laid across hay—
five rolling miles each way—to sing the hymns we are harmonizing today.
There is a dream-like quality in who we almost see:
the familiar soft droop in the eyes of a woman behind us;
our cousin Dottie, long gone, in the face of the shopkeeper who sells honey;
and the sheep farmer, leading morning announcements,
tall and lean as our brothers.
Later, in the aisles of Cooper’s General Store,
we know the voices, the cadence, that intake of air as affirmation—
from island stories and Gaelic lilt—passed on to us as surely
as our height and able hands—but are unsure
how to answer when the owner asks my cousin, Laurel,
“Dear, is this your first time home?”
Kate Young Wilder