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jake-leonard
jake-leonard
American But the love will have been enough... / -- Thornton Wilder
There’s an old Christmas tree— dead, without its needles— floating in the pond. I remember the first warm day in February when my uncle dragged the still-green tree to the center of the ice. He thought it would thaw within a week, and the tree would sink. Minnows could find safety from the big-mouth bass and bluegills while they hid in their buttress of little branches. But it got cold again, and the ice didn't melt till late March. The green needles persevered, preserved by the frost, the branches blanketed in snow. The needles browned and fell from the tips when it got warm. Now the tree’s cocked  awkwardly on its side, and the very top— the part you might place a star or a little cherub as the finishing touch to a Christmas tradition— scrapes the dying and decomposing leaves on the  muddy bottom. The tree, the trunk, that erroneous spot drifting near the edges of the blue-green water —it floats aimlessly as the minnows are swallowed whole.
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Jul 22, 2014
Jul 22, 2014 at 11:28 AM UTC
A Late Winter
I caught a tremendous fish .     .     .     .     .     .     .     . And I let the fish go. —Elizabeth Bishop All the people are old people. Older than me. Granddad took me fishing with one of his friends. They said we’d catch flounder. They killed the engine near the bridge pilings. The lines stayed slack until a red and white floater fell below the bay’s polluted waves. I thought I felt a flounder heaving on the hook. I reeled it up— a fish, cylindrical and silver. Alert, black eyes peered at me. He floundered against the skiff’s side with a barbed hook inside his young, unscarred mouth. The old men laughed: flounder are flat and brown. He was small and nothing special— not a flounder. But they didn't let him go. They ground my catch up into a pink paste, spotted with specs of broken bone. We threw the pieces off the boat to chum the water.
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Jul 22, 2014
Jul 22, 2014 at 2:53 AM UTC
King Mackerel
One day I lost my shoes, so I always walked barefoot. I was  terrified to step on something sharp, so I always had my eyes locked on the ***** ugly ground, always looking down. One day I became lost in my thoughts and stepped on a rock. A pang shot through my being and looked up. And I found the sky.
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Jun 21, 2013
Jun 21, 2013 at 10:31 PM UTC
Barefoot
I have been one acquainted with the night, But darkness gives me peace not often found On summer days.  I look alone to them, But winter winds, the moon, and shining stars Provide companionship to men like me. I dance around the dark and think they must Consider me to be a lunatic; The moon always befriends a crazy man. But loneliness reminds me of close friends, And cold revives the thoughts of pleasant fires, And darkness hides the stories of low liars. I might not like the night itself as much As I adore the memories it brings, But I still find a beauty in night skies Because it blocks my poor, imperfect eyes And gives, in darkness, a new light to things.
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Jan 29, 2013
Jan 29, 2013 at 9:39 PM UTC
The Warmth of Winter Nights
I stood in the pouring rain— Marveled at its beauty, And I thought of all the times I cursed it and called it ugly. I sat in an empty room— Cursed her and called her ugly, And I thought of all the times I marveled at her beauty.
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Sep 15, 2012
Sep 15, 2012 at 3:25 PM UTC
I Stood and Sat