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S M Chen Dec 2016
A wonderful fish is the koi.
It does more to please than annoi.
     What gives me puzzlement
     Is, despite nuzzlement,
I can't tell a girl fish from boi.
S M Chen Dec 2016
The older I get,
The better you seem.
You may have died,
But not your dream
For all of us -
Your offspring.
So on this day
Your praise I sing.

For compared with
Some of the rest,
I was fortunate;
You were the best.

On this, your day,
I think of you
And miss you quite;
That much is true.
For even though
You’ve been long gone,
Our memories
Live on and on.

Though you could not
Give many ‘things,’
You gave me roots;
You gave me wings
To be the man
I hoped to be.
To start my own
Family tree.
to my deceased father on Fathers Day.  2016
S M Chen Dec 2016
Pockets are a wonderful thing.

They hold a little piece of string

And little ***** and little jacks

(They’re not so good for shiny tacks

And other sharp things like small nails

Or slimy things like little snails).

*

Pockets are good to have in pants,

Shirts and jackets.  If you put ants

Inside a pocket, they won’t stay;

They will crawl out that very day.

So you should not put bugs and such

In pockets; they don’t like it much.

You put in something that’s alive

It’s dark in there; it may not thrive.

And if you put in something wet

Your mom is sure to be upset.

And she really does not much care

For toads or frogs to be in there.

*

What else goes into a pocket?

Perhaps a small Davy Crockett,

Faded photo in a locket,

Or tiny car, boat, or rocket.

A little stone, a card or two,

A stick of gum for you to chew.

Piece of paper on which you wrote

A secret code, or teacher’s note.

*

But what goes in there has to fit.

In pants, too much and you can’t sit.

In shirts it seems to matter less,

Although too much still makes a mess.

*

Pockets hold some coins and money.

So much stuff it isn’t funny.

Sunglasses, or maybe cell phone.

Likely the phone won’t be alone.

Something to write with, like a pen.

You never know you might write when.

*

Different kinds of sweets and candy.

To hold, pockets are most handy.

They let both of your hands be free

As hands should almost always be.

And let you carry around stuff;

(It seems you never have enough).

*

While some are big and some are small.

Some are barely pockets at all.

In different shape they sometimes come;

More useful than others are some.

Some are narrow and some are wide.

Wide ones allow more stuff inside.

Some are shallow and some are deep.

Deep ones permit more things to keep.

*

So when you buy a pants or shirt

Do look for pockets, which won’t hurt

To have, for I think it is wise

(And this should come as no surprise)

To have a pocket for which you

Might have no need (or think you do);

Like the spare tire that may be new.

*

Do I love pockets?  I sure do.
for a grandson
S M Chen Dec 2016
One winter day he felt it;
an ache (a hurt from wrongs
of long ago?) deep within
the substance of his pulp.

How long itʼd been there
he couldnʼt say. A day,
a week, or maybe longer.
Who knows when termites
in the quiet night
begin to gnaw?

But when they had him split
as for a sacrifice, they found
the founding of their fears.
They had to close him up
to face the worst of nature
on its terms.

So he went home,
knowing that the thing
inside him would not rest
till it had sapped him
dry; only then, would it,
like him, cease its labor.

The anorexia and the inability
to eat, the pain that bored
and bored, and wouldnʼt remit,
the weakness and the loss
of will (this most of all)
to live, to fight
the fight of one who knows
heʼs going to lose
(how do you make a fight
like that look good?) -
we saw him suffer these
and so much more,
yet were as helpless,
though less hopeless.

Through all of this
the one who suffered most
next to him was the one
who shared his ground.
She shed the tears
he could not shed
(but how he wept inside)
and smiled if he was able to
keep down a meal, or two.
Always by his side,
what little energy she had
flowed ever to him,
a flickering light
in his darkness.

We watched him wither,
leaves drop one by one
at first, then in clusters,
ever faster, and when,
roots rotted by the blight,
the trunk toppled and lay still
in final rest, we,
branches of that tree,
all died a little.
S M Chen Dec 2016
See her stagger
as they drag her
through the city street.
Hear them twitter,
watch them stare
as they set her,
without care,
at the Master's feet.

See her cower
as they query
what to do with her.
Watch Him, weary
of evil games,
take stick in hand,
write in sand
secret sins and names.

Now all are gone
save two alone.
He wipes her tears,
dispels her fears;
does not condemn
her more than them.

*

Many a stone
I have thrown;
yet, had I thought
(as well I ought)
a bit more love,
I should have known
glass is what
my house is made of.
S M Chen Dec 2016
When I fail to think of You
(And, sad to say, times more than few)
Because of all I need to do
(Or think I do - that may be true)

I hie me to the clear, cold air
At heights where oxygen is rare
Bluer skies and brighter sun; where
One can discard life’s every care.

And on the mountaintop I see
My life with greater clarity.
I feel unfettered; now am free
To be the man I strive to be.

Why to the mountains do I go?
Whether there be snow or no?
Although the reasons may not show
I’m moved by mountains; this I know.
S M Chen Dec 2016
Our garden was always open
To any who would come;
The flowers ever fragrant
And held in awe by some.

Tulips, lilacs, and daffodils,
Roses of red and white,
Peonies for my enchantment;
All made for our delight.

-----

You asked to see our garden,
And so I let you in.
Flattered by your interest,
I showed what grew within.

It was there you tempted me;
Said I would not surely die.
Tempted me with lovely fruit;
Twisted truth into lie.

You said my eyes would open,
I’d know both evil and good.
This you failed to tell me: could
I know but good, I should.

So I took the fruit you proffered,
Bit it and ate thereof.
And though it happened in silence,
That’s how hate supplanted love.

There’s something that I’d like to say:
I was beguiled; not so my mate.
Though horrified, he loved me so,
He ate the fruit and shared my fate.

Might this not have happened
Had I not strayed from Adam’s side?
He might have stopped my folly.
Perhaps you can decide.

-----

The light that cloaked us disappeared;
Vanished like the stars at day.
Our eyes opened, but what we saw
Brought foreboding and dismay.

We made clothing with leaves of fig.
Covered up to hide our shame
And guilt for having disobeyed;
But did nothing to hide blame.

Adam blamed me; I blamed you.
No self-responsibility.
Had we nothing else to blame
We might have blamed the Tree.

God listened, then pronounced His curse.
Our hearts were filled with woe
Despite our ignorance of how
Hard the winds of fate can blow.

-----

The garden blooms as once it did
But I’m no longer there.
What then was bliss, now is this:
A life I can barely bear.

-----

But yet there’s hope for me, for us.
God told of the master plan
(That we might live forever)
To save the race of man.

-----

The bluebells whisper now to me
I shouldn’t have ventured near the Tree.
All that I had may never be
Except in distant memory.
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