
The more she strained her mother wit
To put the jigsaw into place,
The more the pieces wouldn’t fit.
Too bad the cat had felt the need
To leap into the midst of things—
The puzzle would have been complete.
Somehow she had misplaced the lid,
Which had a picture stamped on it
Of what she searched for in her head.
The work lay spread in front of her;
The shapes appeared and disappeared,
Each morphing into metaphor.
Sometimes they’d stay where they belonged—
But then, to her weak eyes, it seemed
She’d put them all together wrong.
She kept on shuffling scattered bits;
Meanwhile a lifetime passed beneath
Her aged, trembling fingertips.
*****
Lee Evans writes: “This particular poem arose from the year-long habit my wife and I have of doing jigsaw puzzles. (Big surprise!) In such circumstances one gets to thinking a lot about putting the pieces of one’s life together, especially those of us who are in our mid seventies. I may have stolen the title from a Paul Simon song, but that has nothing to do with it. Several people I have known have suffered from dementia late in life, but the poem is more about trying to grasp fluid realities than dementia, and attempting this in the frailty of one’s declining years. But that’s not all there is to the poem…”
‘Late in the Evening’ was first published in Snakeskin.
Lee Evans was born in Annapolis, Maryland and worked for the Maryland State Archives. Having retired to Bath, Maine, he worked for the local YMCA and retired from there. He has self-published 13 books of poetry, which can be found on Amazon and Lulu.com. He occasionally puts poems on a blog, The Road and Where It Goes (Formal purists should be forewarned that he has written a fair amount of free verse!)
Photo: “Cosmo Helping with Jigsaw Puzzles – 2020” by cseeman is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
What a lovely poem! I share your perception, though I tend to play Penguin solitaire online and write sonnets to achieve the satisfaction of getting things to fit. In the spirit of sharing, and not competition, here is a recent response of mine to the same insight.
THE JIGSAW PUZZLE
putting a jigsaw puzzle together
can only be done right or not at all
and I believe that to be true whether
you look at the pieces’ shapes or just fall
for the picture on the front of the box
since both approaches will give you a guide
colours’ distribution may be complex
but each view lets you recognise a side
borders give order but if the jig-saw
cut in a pattern that was uniform
logic can’t follow where there is no law
and seekers can only tell if they’re warm
or cold by judgements based on their own sight
so almost as hard as life to get right
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Nice analogy!
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Amen to that. Thanks for sharing! I don’t know if I should admit that my wife and I have a jigsaw going throughout most of the year. Right now, I’m working on an area with clouds. Yes! I’ve looked at clouds from both sides now!
Lee
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I find artists’ clouds are usually easier than photos of the actual sky.
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