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Grace Before Meals Sunday afternoon, a year ago. Early but late afternoon, end of July sun still high enough to provide a loving and kind warmth through fractus clouds, But doing double duty and Supplying continuous eye candy via riots of razzle-dazzles glistenings upon the prima facie of my friend, my boon companion, my bay. Sitting on a weathered Adirondack chair, grayed like me, a solitary outpost, our third Musketeer, it so belongs where I find it, in the corner of the yard, hard by a white picket fence and footed by an out cropping,     a patch of wild grass uncarpeted, we are aligned, the chair and I, in so many ways, we accompany each other beach-facing, one unit, designed by man but nature-made of, and signed by her in a cursive, gentle script as follows: **Quiet, please, for this is a place of our mutual quiet contemplation.** These regal chairs are tinged with green moss stains, as I am tinged with silver streaks so we laugh at each other and we laugh together, delighted to share the grandeur of the pleasure of the exactness of this precise moment. The bay claps its waves in honor of the symmetry of the trinity of man, wood and water, a more perfect union My woman calls to me, supper is ready and I smell the onions and the raisins and the love that singes our shared salted air With deep regrets and promises solemn, Adieu, Adieu my friends, bay and chair, sunlight extraordinaire, wait for me! This poem but my R.S.V.P. an oath of return sworn, for I am man, placed here only to sing the praises of my earthly delights, my truest friends, I sing of thy grace, Grace Before A Meal
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Aug 3, 2013
Aug 3, 2013 at 4:06 AM UTC
Grace Before Meals
Grace Before Meals Sunday afternoon, a year ago. Early but late afternoon, end of July sun still high enough to provide a loving and kind warmth through fractus clouds, But doing double duty and Supplying continuous eye candy via riots of razzle-dazzles glistenings upon the prima facie of my friend, my boon companion, my bay. Sitting on a weathered Adirondack chair, grayed like me, a solitary outpost, our third Musketeer, it so belongs where I find it, in the corner of the yard, hard by a white picket fence and footed by an out cropping,     a patch of wild grass uncarpeted, we are aligned, the chair and I, in so many ways, we accompany each other beach-facing, one unit, designed by man but nature-made of, and signed by her in a cursive, gentle script as follows: **Quiet, please, for this is a place of our mutual quiet contemplation.** These regal chairs are tinged with green moss stains, as I am tinged with silver streaks so we laugh at each other and we laugh together, delighted to share the grandeur of the pleasure of the exactness of this precise moment. The bay claps its waves in honor of the symmetry of the trinity of man, wood and water, a more perfect union My woman calls to me, supper is ready and I smell the onions and the raisins and the love that singes our shared salted air With deep regrets and promises solemn, Adieu, Adieu my friends, bay and chair, sunlight extraordinaire, wait for me! This poem but my R.S.V.P. an oath of return sworn, for I am man, placed here only to sing the praises of my earthly delights, my truest friends, I sing of thy grace, Grace Before A Meal
nat-lipstadt
Written by
99/M/NYC/Lippstadt/Kraków
Aug 3, 2013
Aug 3, 2013 at 4:06 AM UTC
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