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Gale Eaton ’69

Alumnae Poet

As an undergraduate, Gale Eaton served on the editorial boards of the Grécourt Review and the intercollegiate Alkahest. Since then she has written puppet plays, a doctoral dissertation, syllabi, accreditation reports, mission statements, departmental websites, conference papers, letters of recommendation, four books, and annual holiday letters. Retirement is like school break. No more social science, and poems sneak into her spare moments. She has recently edited a special edition of the Grécourt Review for the Class of 1969’s 2024 reunion.

Select Poems

Your white enamel dishpan was
already marred when I stole it from
the summer house, used by
hands less expert than yours or
more hurried. Years on, its bottom
is grayed by a craquelure of tiny
scratches. Imagine a dance of
gnarled fingers swiping plates
clean, tumbling silverware, and
scrubbing—day after day, week
after week—the cast iron skillet.
Caught in a multiple exposure of
moving film. And then look hard at
the result. Not a solid gray but
a subtle tangle that makes me
think of reindeer moss and of
all the moments I worked beside
you in that kitchen, gladly or
sulkily. The delicate snarls and
even after death the failures of
daughterhood. The quiet joys.
 

Tuesday, looking out the window,
I saw the backyard oak lit up
silver against heavy clouds, sudden
as a white squall on the bay. I
jammed my feet into shoes and ran
out the back door too late. Magic
had already yielded to the more
common loveliness of sun-gilt bark,
which you especially loved, and
why in that lost moment had I thought
to catch you a competing silver
beauty and send it by a phone
invented after we lost you?