Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Your huge hands, a pool champion’s sausage fingers carving roast dinners. I rarely think of you now but memory lingers. It’s leaves return every year; they rustle in the rain. The walnut tree with the swing. You’d push me so high rush of wind and air, chunks of cherry bough caught in my hair and I thought I would never come down. Your skin wrinkled in the sun like an apricot. And me and Elisha would run and race electrical jeeps in the garden fetching you walnuts. I was afraid of your pond, you said there was a shark in it, dangerous like the cancer in your body, I was afraid of the pig skin patch on your arm. Considered too young for the funeral, my memories look like the photos I look at afterwards.
0
Jun 12, 2010
Jun 12, 2010 at 4:12 PM UTC
The Walnut Tree
Your huge hands, a pool champion’s sausage fingers carving roast dinners. I rarely think of you now but memory lingers. It’s leaves return every year; they rustle in the rain. The walnut tree with the swing. You’d push me so high rush of wind and air, chunks of cherry bough caught in my hair and I thought I would never come down. Your skin wrinkled in the sun like an apricot. And me and Elisha would run and race electrical jeeps in the garden fetching you walnuts. I was afraid of your pond, you said there was a shark in it, dangerous like the cancer in your body, I was afraid of the pig skin patch on your arm. Considered too young for the funeral, my memories look like the photos I look at afterwards.
Written by
Jun 12, 2010
Jun 12, 2010 at 4:12 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem