I will bring you concord grapes,
for you like the color of them, and I the way
your cheeks move when your mouth
is full of them
I will cut the meat for you,
in thin slices, as razor narrow as the knife
will allow
the nurses tell me
to let you feed yourself
to gain your strength
back
but we, just you and I,
know your arms will become more flaccid
with each passing night, and no amount
of measured movement, will make
that right
I will make the soft cloth wet, warm
and caress the dirt away, for they scrub you
like palette or canvas, painted all wrong
I will brush your hair,
a hundred strokes each eve,
as you did, before your amber waves
turned wistful white, and your limbs
went limp
I will read you stories
of children at play, lads and lasses
who never grow gray
I will bring apples
for your wooden bowl
but we don't dare slice them
for they are there for us to watch
to help us remember red, round things,
beginnings, in a world before this room
of endless ending