Hello* Poetry
Classics
Words
Blog
F.A.Q.
About
Contact
Guidelines
© 2024 HePo
by
Eliot
Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads.
Become a member
Terry Collett
Poems
Mar 2014
YOUR GREY MITTENS.
I wear
your grey
woollen mittens,
the ones
you can make
into gloves
by pulling over
the fingers
to make complete;
soft, thick,
but warm; neat.
I can sense you near
with them on;
an imaginary pulse
moves along
beside mine.
You felt the cold;
although didn't say
as such
or not
over much;
your hands
and fingers
seeking shelter
within the wool,
rubbing against
the fibre, skin
on softness,
warmth like
a kind of drug,
seeping in.
I wear your grey
woollen mittens,
my fingers fitting
where yours once did,
the feel of you
in the wool's soft memory;
the fibreβs hold,
keeping you warm,
my son,
keeping to warm
against the cold.
The mittens seem fresh;
not worn thin or aged
or coming unwoven
as some things do.
I wear your grey mittens,
have them close,
neat and touching.
I wish they were you.
FOR OLE. 1984-2014.
Written by
Terry Collett
Sussex, England
(Sussex, England)
Follow
π
π
π
π
π
π€―
π€
πͺ
π€
π
π¨
π€€
π
π’
π
π€¬
0
719
victoria
,
Afrodita Nestor
,
David I Phillips
,
Claire R
,
Ottar
and
6 others
Please
log in
to view and add comments on poems