Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Dear Grandpa, Nanna told me all about it. The smell of ****** smoke and screams. Bandoliers falling in all directions with grenades honoring the occasion. And the story of you, And how you became confetti. It’s been so many years, the smell of barbecue smoke and laughter reign now. Kids run in all directions And balloons join the celebration. March 25th is a holiday now. Nanna always brings a million memories. She says she has to feed them, because if she don’t they’ll eat her up. So she tells us stories about you. I heard you even fought Victor Charlie. Musta been one gnarly son of a ***** because I heard he won. But don’t apologize. When I was eight, my momma told me I should be proud of you because you put up a fight. When Nanna was 25, Two slender men in uniform made their way onto the front porch, knocked on the door, And told her the same thing. She sat on the porch for years Waiting for you. But the Rolling Stones don’t roll no more, crickets don’t sing, and Nanna’s rocking chair is retired. Your grandson likes to play on it, But we don’t want him to break it. He's a curious little grunt, so I tell him stories. “Once, your great grandpa dodged a bullet.” I tell him “it went right past his God **** ear.” He stops me and asks The same question I asked my father. But Pa, what's faster than a bullet? Nothin'. -a.m
0
Mar 24, 2016
Mar 24, 2016 at 4:32 PM UTC
Victor Charlie
Dear Grandpa, Nanna told me all about it. The smell of ****** smoke and screams. Bandoliers falling in all directions with grenades honoring the occasion. And the story of you, And how you became confetti. It’s been so many years, the smell of barbecue smoke and laughter reign now. Kids run in all directions And balloons join the celebration. March 25th is a holiday now. Nanna always brings a million memories. She says she has to feed them, because if she don’t they’ll eat her up. So she tells us stories about you. I heard you even fought Victor Charlie. Musta been one gnarly son of a ***** because I heard he won. But don’t apologize. When I was eight, my momma told me I should be proud of you because you put up a fight. When Nanna was 25, Two slender men in uniform made their way onto the front porch, knocked on the door, And told her the same thing. She sat on the porch for years Waiting for you. But the Rolling Stones don’t roll no more, crickets don’t sing, and Nanna’s rocking chair is retired. Your grandson likes to play on it, But we don’t want him to break it. He's a curious little grunt, so I tell him stories. “Once, your great grandpa dodged a bullet.” I tell him “it went right past his God **** ear.” He stops me and asks The same question I asked my father. But Pa, what's faster than a bullet? Nothin'. -a.m
franticlover
Written by
Mar 24, 2016
Mar 24, 2016 at 4:32 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem