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Your shirts hang drying that we washed, my son. I recall you wearing them, each and every one. They hang there lonesome now, sad relics of your wardrobe, cast-offs of a life gone too soon, cut short, live long after me, I thought. I like the patterns, the colours, too, but on seeing them, I’m remembered sadly, of lovely you. I sniff along the cloth, feel the buttons that you once did up, undid, your fingers touch and hug and feel, the pain, of that, too much. The shirts hang innocent, unaware, lifeless, unworn and cold, I can feel them, but want you to hold. Maybe I’ll wear the shirts to give them back some life, some warmth, fill them out, give them body to embrace, pretend to them I’m you, act out the lie, not reveal to them, not tell them, I watched you die.
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Feb 28, 2014
Feb 28, 2014 at 5:43 PM UTC
YOUR SHIRTS.
Your shirts hang drying that we washed, my son. I recall you wearing them, each and every one. They hang there lonesome now, sad relics of your wardrobe, cast-offs of a life gone too soon, cut short, live long after me, I thought. I like the patterns, the colours, too, but on seeing them, I’m remembered sadly, of lovely you. I sniff along the cloth, feel the buttons that you once did up, undid, your fingers touch and hug and feel, the pain, of that, too much. The shirts hang innocent, unaware, lifeless, unworn and cold, I can feel them, but want you to hold. Maybe I’ll wear the shirts to give them back some life, some warmth, fill them out, give them body to embrace, pretend to them I’m you, act out the lie, not reveal to them, not tell them, I watched you die.
TO OLE' 1984-2014
terry-collett
Written by
Feb 28, 2014
Feb 28, 2014 at 5:43 PM UTC
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