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"curcurbita" poems
I’d like to think I am dead, like an old Maine farm left to decay. I crumble demurely into the river and grass. Chickens gone by breakfast, you by crepuscule; Rockwell never painted defeat or loss of limb but never has he seen your lips, cracked with solitude, fortitude, secrets, and the faint music of a funeral pyre. I always remembered you, rising with the sun and whispers, sweeping the porch, scattering leaves and harvest: scalding coffee and soft hands on this October Day— I cannot recall for the life of me— what color were your eyes. Now I am wrinkled, small, and tired, left amongst gentle picket fences, whitewashed walls, creased linen, and every single day that I wasted those silent early oatmeal mornings. Just so you know and don’t worry, in case you’re worrying, I still get chilly at night, and yes I kept your flannel shirt; and oh I forgot to say: I cheated at Monopoly. --my hands crack in the pastoral stillness.
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Nov 1, 2013
Nov 1, 2013 at 11:24 AM UTC
Curcurbita Pepo, or Every Pumpkin I Won’t Carve With You