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In 1973, My father used a favorite shucking knife, Its short blade loose in the wooden shaft, To pry open rocklike oysters. He passed them to us, his heirs To the iced tea spoons, the fondue *** The escargot shells, the silver martini shaker, And we would first check them for pearls And then hold them, like religion, Above our mouths, Tip our heads back, And let them slide over our tongues. Yesterday, at Little Pond, As March thawed the glassthin ice, I startled at the cracking, Welcomed the blade, sang the amen.
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Aug 18, 2010
Aug 18, 2010 at 3:53 PM UTC
Bivalve
In 1973, My father used a favorite shucking knife, Its short blade loose in the wooden shaft, To pry open rocklike oysters. He passed them to us, his heirs To the iced tea spoons, the fondue *** The escargot shells, the silver martini shaker, And we would first check them for pearls And then hold them, like religion, Above our mouths, Tip our heads back, And let them slide over our tongues. Yesterday, at Little Pond, As March thawed the glassthin ice, I startled at the cracking, Welcomed the blade, sang the amen.
March 2009
Written by
American
Aug 18, 2010
Aug 18, 2010 at 3:53 PM UTC
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