For class, again. Lame format, but it was easy, cuz I had to only create a few original lines and just recycle them.
I've stolen something from the depths of geology
and I wear it around my neck on a silver chain.
An arthropod that lived a million years ago,
now reduced to a cast of silica glass.
I wear it around my neck on a silver chain,
my fingers run across the fourteen rib pairs,
now reduced to a cast of silica glass,
and the helmeted head that couldn't save him.
My fingers run across fourteen rib pairs,
and I feel connected to that Ordovician sea.
The helmeted head that couldn't save him
reminds me of my own human frailty.
And I feel connected to that Ordovician sea,
because I've stolen something from Geology.
A reminder of my own human frailty
from an arthropod that lived a million years ago.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Store
My grandpa bought the building in the sixties,
and won the town with smiling Irish charm.
Eventually the Germans and the Polocks
decided we weren't strangers after all.
Now people of all kinds come through the front-door,
and teh same old farmers stomp in through the back,
where Grandpa spends all sumer fixing mowers
and patching Mrs. Feia's window screens.
My dad took over when he was just thirty,
a year before my big brother was born.
He added on a warehouse anda door bell
which rings a hundred times a day at least,
as old familiar faces "drop on by"
to ask if anyone measured the rain,
to compare their corn and soybean crops,
to share their neighbors' gossip and good news.
While Herman tells me stories of his horses
-first Mystic then the mare he's never named,
Jan brings me paper bags of backyard apples
to take to school when I go back again.
My third grandma shuffles in about noon
with a card and a box full of cookies.
"So sorry I missed your birthday this year"
she grins - but it's my fault, I was out of town.
I huge her and promise to bring up her order
when the truck arrives at four thirty.
and won the town with smiling Irish charm.
Eventually the Germans and the Polocks
decided we weren't strangers after all.
Now people of all kinds come through the front-door,
and teh same old farmers stomp in through the back,
where Grandpa spends all sumer fixing mowers
and patching Mrs. Feia's window screens.
My dad took over when he was just thirty,
a year before my big brother was born.
He added on a warehouse anda door bell
which rings a hundred times a day at least,
as old familiar faces "drop on by"
to ask if anyone measured the rain,
to compare their corn and soybean crops,
to share their neighbors' gossip and good news.
While Herman tells me stories of his horses
-first Mystic then the mare he's never named,
Jan brings me paper bags of backyard apples
to take to school when I go back again.
My third grandma shuffles in about noon
with a card and a box full of cookies.
"So sorry I missed your birthday this year"
she grins - but it's my fault, I was out of town.
I huge her and promise to bring up her order
when the truck arrives at four thirty.
Sunday, April 1, 2007
Kim
www.caringbridge.org/visit /kimberlyfroelich
"Let's race!"
she'd say, and spring down the driveway,
her bare feet speckled with gravel.
We'd feed apples to the horses
- just a little extra
before grabbing our bowls of Cheerios.
A few cartoons, a few loads of laundry,
and we'd both have to escape to the sunshine.
She napped with her head on my belly
and I read paperbacks bookmarked with blades of grass.
"But Trace-"
she'd say, and fix me with blue eyes
warm as her favorite mittens.
We'd stay up late watching cartoons
-just a little past bedtime
before I'd tuck her in for the night.
Too old for bedtime stories, not too old
to cling to my hand, or ask me to stay.
Her eyelashes fluttered while dreaming,
and I prayed she'd stay that way.
"It's cancer,"
they say. The news is fatal,
and all I can say is "my baby..."
as I sob in the hallway
- just trying to be quiet
before grabbing my keys and running.
So many tubes, so many devices,
and people croweded throughout the room.
She couldn't even smile when she saw me,
though I promised her trail rides to cheer her.
"Hey, kiddo,"
I said, last week in the hospital,
when she suddenly looked so old,
"we'll get through this
-just hold on,"
before the doctors told me to go.
"Let's race!"
she'd say, and spring down the driveway,
her bare feet speckled with gravel.
We'd feed apples to the horses
- just a little extra
before grabbing our bowls of Cheerios.
A few cartoons, a few loads of laundry,
and we'd both have to escape to the sunshine.
She napped with her head on my belly
and I read paperbacks bookmarked with blades of grass.
"But Trace-"
she'd say, and fix me with blue eyes
warm as her favorite mittens.
We'd stay up late watching cartoons
-just a little past bedtime
before I'd tuck her in for the night.
Too old for bedtime stories, not too old
to cling to my hand, or ask me to stay.
Her eyelashes fluttered while dreaming,
and I prayed she'd stay that way.
"It's cancer,"
they say. The news is fatal,
and all I can say is "my baby..."
as I sob in the hallway
- just trying to be quiet
before grabbing my keys and running.
So many tubes, so many devices,
and people croweded throughout the room.
She couldn't even smile when she saw me,
though I promised her trail rides to cheer her.
"Hey, kiddo,"
I said, last week in the hospital,
when she suddenly looked so old,
"we'll get through this
-just hold on,"
before the doctors told me to go.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)