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Blueberry picking was no chore. When I was too young to do many things Well and fishing with my father's Father, I discovered all kinds of stuff I wasn't good at, like how to read Ripples, or tackle slippery eels, or even how to clean Spiny perches. 'Where are the hungry fish?' Grandfather would spout at me, all the green pools Were liars and cheats and patience, Was another one of my shortcomings, Not only this, my father hoped his trades On me, but like a conflicted carpenter I was in love with trees. This all left me wondering just what I might do, that is until I plumbed my first Blueberry. In the hoary-head of blue things, Stuff was easy, and ripe for the picking, Bunching blue-baubles in baskets over-ripened Of berries. On special mornings, due southwest In lazy hills, round my home, — bells Were breaking, in quiet sections of the Canton, Massachusetts woods, and playing by them, We rounded blue notes, some friends and I, Plucked-out tunes to the breeze, on leafy- Instruments, and pulled our weight, into moil-moisted Bushels, (one batch of blue was more than a ton Of any other fruit!) Toiling, till the sky would peek And spill its hue. Foragers were we, as teaming Minnows round a polk-a-dot reef, feasting on some great Blue-Fin’s roe, brave savages, painted in the glow of ember- Light, of burnished yellows, and bushy-blanched browns Drenched by dew and dappled in the stipple Of sun-brushed fire, all the colours making patterns, even Box Turtles knew. How merry it was we made our labors, Why it was wicked! And muggy from the heat of cool Indigo stars, we squenched our thirst, in glugs Of kisses, each following the greatest by far, And one soft day, we did notice the crown Of a Princess, set on top of each full Noble-blooded faery-pearl dropped As if to commemorate all The things that were worth Knowing, stuff that was ripe, Easy, and rapt In blue.
0
Jan 23, 2015
Jan 23, 2015 at 11:59 AM UTC
Blueberry Picking
Blueberry picking was no chore. When I was too young to do many things Well and fishing with my father's Father, I discovered all kinds of stuff I wasn't good at, like how to read Ripples, or tackle slippery eels, or even how to clean Spiny perches. 'Where are the hungry fish?' Grandfather would spout at me, all the green pools Were liars and cheats and patience, Was another one of my shortcomings, Not only this, my father hoped his trades On me, but like a conflicted carpenter I was in love with trees. This all left me wondering just what I might do, that is until I plumbed my first Blueberry. In the hoary-head of blue things, Stuff was easy, and ripe for the picking, Bunching blue-baubles in baskets over-ripened Of berries. On special mornings, due southwest In lazy hills, round my home, — bells Were breaking, in quiet sections of the Canton, Massachusetts woods, and playing by them, We rounded blue notes, some friends and I, Plucked-out tunes to the breeze, on leafy- Instruments, and pulled our weight, into moil-moisted Bushels, (one batch of blue was more than a ton Of any other fruit!) Toiling, till the sky would peek And spill its hue. Foragers were we, as teaming Minnows round a polk-a-dot reef, feasting on some great Blue-Fin’s roe, brave savages, painted in the glow of ember- Light, of burnished yellows, and bushy-blanched browns Drenched by dew and dappled in the stipple Of sun-brushed fire, all the colours making patterns, even Box Turtles knew. How merry it was we made our labors, Why it was wicked! And muggy from the heat of cool Indigo stars, we squenched our thirst, in glugs Of kisses, each following the greatest by far, And one soft day, we did notice the crown Of a Princess, set on top of each full Noble-blooded faery-pearl dropped As if to commemorate all The things that were worth Knowing, stuff that was ripe, Easy, and rapt In blue.
ormond
Written by
Irish
Jan 23, 2015
Jan 23, 2015 at 11:59 AM UTC
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