Because we had not yet reached the point
Where I could say, "I love you,"
And hear you say it back –
You punched my fat biceps
Gave me your sly half smile
Or merely walked away –
We had not fought
To reach a father-son accommodation
The way I did when I was nearly thirty-five,
And my dad was sixty-six or so.
I shall screw your name and dates
On a gold leaf plate
To your cherry wood urn
This some soon time and mutter prayers
Now that you’ve been dead a year.
Commemoration, but not reconciliation.
The voids between the words
Scream different things to me:
Not adult, but in the making;
Not cremains, but ashes;
Not lost, but dead;
And especially, Eternally Nineteen.
Please feel free, as always, to comment below:
© WDMoser. Printed with permission. No part of this poem may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means without written permission from the author.
Monday, January 7, 2008
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1 comment:
Bill:
Beautiful poem. -Dianne
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