Hello PoetryVoting

Vote

Voting-Boards

Home

HomeFollowingInboxNotifications

Read

ReadLiftedFeedsHeartedHistoryMy poemsNew poem

Explore

ExploreOrbitsWordsTagsClassics
Log in
0
Stars
0
Embers
0
Alerts
0
Inbox

Vote

Voting-Boards

Home

HomeFollowingInboxNotifications

Read

ReadLiftedFeedsHeartedHistoryMy poemsNew poem

Explore

ExploreOrbitsWordsTagsClassics
Log in
0
Stars
0
Embers
0
Alerts
0
Inbox

Your Grandmother's Vase

I broke your grandmother’s vase. The blue one, patterned with lilacs, liberated from a secondhand store in Czechoslovakia in 1939. Like your grandmother, it came with stories: she talked a German officer into buying it for her in exchange for a date she never showed up for, the year her brother put her on a train with a trunk full of dresses and a little sister, a hundred korunas sewn into her underwear, where she knew no one would find them. I broke your grandmother’s vase. I knocked it off the shelf, dove to catch it, missed, and watched it shatter into thirty-nine pieces, patterned with lilacs. Thirty-nine, because I counted every piece as I hid them in a drawer in the shed behind the house, beside the hammer and wrench, where I knew you would not find them.
Request permission to use this poem
Written by
gabriel-gadfly
American
Published
Dec 21, 2011
Lines·Words
29·139
Notes

This poem and many more can be read on the author's website, http://gabrielgadfly.com

Permission

Request to use this poem

Tell gabriel-gadfly how you would like to use it. We review requests before forwarding them.

AboutBlogFAQPrivacyTermsContact
© 2009-2026 Hello Poetry/v27.0 by @eliotyork
Explore
Hello PoetryVoting
Write