The Leaves
By Austin Smith
The leaves lived behind the dining room doors.
They only came out when company came out.
Dad would lift one end of the table, my brothers
And I the other. Then we’d shuffle a few steps
Backward, pulling the table apart.
Turned out that, like the loaves and fishes,
The table wasn’t finite.
We could make it as long as we needed it to be.
Did we need one leaf, two leaves, three?
It depended on who all was coming.
I loved the nights we needed all the leaves.
They meant there were still too many
Of us to fit around the leafless table.
But I knew one day there’d be no need for them.
Then what would we do with the leaves?
I thought how it would be better for a few of us
To sit at too long a table that had three leaves in it
And have to raise our voices
Than to sit whispering around the leafless one.
Source: Poetry (December 2020)