for Sister Eileen
The memory is of January:
 black snow and ice,
 the high sagging steps
 into Amos House
 and my taking them
 two by two
 past the huddle of gray figures, and everywhere
 the suffocating smell
 of fried fish.
 Then of standing beside Sister
 in my fleecy boots,
 in my long white wind-breaker,
 and handing her a trash bag of old clothing—
 and some money.
 The memory is of distance,
 of the distance between us:
 her wet hands
 patting her butcher's apron,
 and her pale smile
 when I offered to help
 (having an hour to spend).
 I have since learned
 that failure pursued her,
 that she fell
 and rose and ran
 and fell again
 until the day of her victory.
 I have felt comforted
 by that.
Betsy Lincoln was a poet and former English instructor at Rhode Island Community College living in Wickford, Rhode Island when this poem appeared.
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