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jesse-renner
American
Do you remember that tree outside of our first grade classroom? That tree was enormous It was the color of a dusty elephant But with flakey skin You could pick it off and crunch In the palm of your hand It must have been dead Long before it was ours Never any bugs Or mold or moss Nothing to stop five-year-olds From laying in its roots It grew into a “Y” before it died Split about seven feet off the ground Perfect for a first imaginary fort A manhunt hiding spot or a goal post For recess super bowls I can remember it With us sitting beneath it At five, at eight, at twelve Sitting Indian-style Picking blades of grass To whistle between our thumbs They mulched that tree years ago It’s chopped and spread under the new playground Keeping kids safe from falls If only we could have explained How much it protected when it still stood…
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Feb 20, 2010
Feb 20, 2010 at 9:12 AM UTC
Guardian
I want to make an icicle From rain drops That have fallen for miles, Through clouds With linings of every color, Just to crash like cars On old shingles Gritty and grooved with age. Those drops would converge As they weave their way down A maze of gables and smoking vents Finally to pool in rusty gutters, That have not been cleaned out in years. It’s cold in December, and windy in Manhattan. Now All I need is discipline. I must overflow, Precisely. Forming my icicle like a tooth Slowly, and from the inside out longer, sharper. Until…SNAP It’s no longer mine. ------------------------ My hope is that it hits, Through hair, flesh and bone, An unsuspecting mind. Instantly frozen and rearranged. Or if not hit Shatter close enough to move Those that crowd below.
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Feb 18, 2010
Feb 18, 2010 at 12:46 PM UTC
Let it go.