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That thing you gave me— I have it still all these years later. I found it the other day, half-hidden, like a folded sweater in a forgotten trunk. You were young then, lovely, haggard like an orchid softly wilting in unforgiving heat. Wasting amazon, pain deep within your legs, resting like a queen on a stone sarcophagus. When the boy read to you, did you hear his stumbling words, from the frayed blue book? Or was your troubled mind wandering elsewhere, on some trackless, stubbled field? He felt only the touch of your hand on his hair, the warm pulse of your breath on his forehead and eyelashes. In the church balcony: Water Music. Fingers stretched above the keys, pipe ***** bright and sonorous. Down below, the congregants gazed upon the pulpit awaiting the benediction. Soul souring, heart filling. God was great. Shimmering like Artemis in her glade, you stood reflected in a mirror on the closet door, gowned in emerald satin— a last look at makeup before he calls upstairs that the car is ready. You smiled as you turned to go, fabric swishing against your legs. Uncertain memory insists you smiled, if only momentarily to unclench the grip upon your windpipe, the blunt pain deep inside your femur, the dark edge arcing at the horizon in your dreams or waking gaze. In that still stratum of existence, that lilting stream of secret thought where no son or daughter enters in, there the soul walks with worry day and night lost in a whispered discourse. We must have all bathed in that gentle stream, its silent water lapping at our feet. When you looked up, distracted, as if from reading Donne or Herbert your ruminations cannot have been unsensed. That thing you gave me, that dark gift, I bear like a secret beneath my winter coat. I know you never meant it to be mine. But the glade was darkening when you walked that field and your gaze was fixed worriedly on a shimmering in the distant woods.
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Dec 1, 2016
Dec 1, 2016 at 12:26 PM UTC
That Gift You Gave Me
That thing you gave me— I have it still all these years later. I found it the other day, half-hidden, like a folded sweater in a forgotten trunk. You were young then, lovely, haggard like an orchid softly wilting in unforgiving heat. Wasting amazon, pain deep within your legs, resting like a queen on a stone sarcophagus. When the boy read to you, did you hear his stumbling words, from the frayed blue book? Or was your troubled mind wandering elsewhere, on some trackless, stubbled field? He felt only the touch of your hand on his hair, the warm pulse of your breath on his forehead and eyelashes. In the church balcony: Water Music. Fingers stretched above the keys, pipe ***** bright and sonorous. Down below, the congregants gazed upon the pulpit awaiting the benediction. Soul souring, heart filling. God was great. Shimmering like Artemis in her glade, you stood reflected in a mirror on the closet door, gowned in emerald satin— a last look at makeup before he calls upstairs that the car is ready. You smiled as you turned to go, fabric swishing against your legs. Uncertain memory insists you smiled, if only momentarily to unclench the grip upon your windpipe, the blunt pain deep inside your femur, the dark edge arcing at the horizon in your dreams or waking gaze. In that still stratum of existence, that lilting stream of secret thought where no son or daughter enters in, there the soul walks with worry day and night lost in a whispered discourse. We must have all bathed in that gentle stream, its silent water lapping at our feet. When you looked up, distracted, as if from reading Donne or Herbert your ruminations cannot have been unsensed. That thing you gave me, that dark gift, I bear like a secret beneath my winter coat. I know you never meant it to be mine. But the glade was darkening when you walked that field and your gaze was fixed worriedly on a shimmering in the distant woods.
jim-hillyt
Written by
Saratoga Springs, NY
Dec 1, 2016
Dec 1, 2016 at 12:26 PM UTC
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