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she sits by her window to write, ever fond of the morning light; not a day passes when she fails to pen an epistle to him she envisions him pulling the missives from his saddle bags perusing them a second time, a third, admiring her chancery cursive a year now since she saw him: steady on his steed, his regiment waiting, eager to join the fray, to ride north under his proud command perhaps at eventide, she will write another letter, in case she forgot anything she intended to say this morn, or just to reach out again before the setting of the sun a cloud passes as she signs her name, another as she folds the paper; soon it seems, a gathering storm--she places the letter in the envelope, its traveling home she turns the candle to pour the wax, then presses the seal; another story from her to him ready for its long journey the stroll from her room to the mantel in the parlor to the pile of paper that grows higher above the hearth a cold cavern of late, for without him, she eschews all things warm--for she knows he must be freezing in the cruel ground where he fell (Spartanburg, South Carolina, Winter, 1863)
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Apr 10, 2017
Apr 10, 2017 at 6:57 PM UTC
the waning light
she sits by her window to write, ever fond of the morning light; not a day passes when she fails to pen an epistle to him she envisions him pulling the missives from his saddle bags perusing them a second time, a third, admiring her chancery cursive a year now since she saw him: steady on his steed, his regiment waiting, eager to join the fray, to ride north under his proud command perhaps at eventide, she will write another letter, in case she forgot anything she intended to say this morn, or just to reach out again before the setting of the sun a cloud passes as she signs her name, another as she folds the paper; soon it seems, a gathering storm--she places the letter in the envelope, its traveling home she turns the candle to pour the wax, then presses the seal; another story from her to him ready for its long journey the stroll from her room to the mantel in the parlor to the pile of paper that grows higher above the hearth a cold cavern of late, for without him, she eschews all things warm--for she knows he must be freezing in the cruel ground where he fell (Spartanburg, South Carolina, Winter, 1863)
spysgrandson
Written by
American
Apr 10, 2017
Apr 10, 2017 at 6:57 PM UTC
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