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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Walking home at high noon

Walking home at high noon you think
the air is reminiscent of
soupy peat moss, slowly mulching
your pale pores, composting the muck
of the millennia, you plow

slowly past the idle vendors
of vegetables and days yielded
to simpler times. The sidewalks reach
out in all directions, but one
carries you back to childhood

in the midst of midwest summer
when your brother grew potatoes
in the crevices of his neck
and your mother's adoration
was the soil of eternity.

8 comments:

  1. I like the subtle alliteration in that first stanza....moss, mulching, millenia. Excellent write.

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    1. Thank you, Brenda! So many good M words to describe this disgusting humidity :)

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  2. We grew potatoes behind our ears. Obviously we had different mothers. :)

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    1. haha you're right! My brother grew them behind his ears as well! My mom and I couldn't help but crack up at all the places he could manage to grow them. Such is the life of a little boy in summer (before the invention of video games) :)

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  3. I like memory poems that carry one back to childhood. Wish we had some heat / humidity here. Here's mine for NaPoWriMo 11.

    http://inthecornerofmyeye.blogspot.com/2012/04/blank-spaces.html

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    1. I'll be happy to ship you some of this humidity! :)

      I really like your poem, Mary. All of it rings true.

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  4. A delicious poem (sorry about your humidity angst, but you write about it so well). My mum used to complain about the tidemark, showing where I'd stopped washing, usually down as far as the chin!

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    1. haha that's so adorable :) Thank you so much for reading and commenting, vivinfrance :)

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