poem


SUBMITTED BY: abn2016

DATE: Feb. 18, 2017, 7:22 a.m.

FORMAT: Text only

SIZE: 913 Bytes

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  1. Every day in summer I'd cross the border;
  2. he'd nod, pick up the horseshoes,
  3. hand me one, triple the size
  4. of my palm, and say, You first. We'd play
  5. away the afternoon. Few words
  6. punctuated the clank of horseshoe
  7. against stake, until the fog rolled in
  8. and I'd retrace my steps home.
  9. I was five or six; he, white haired,
  10. however old that meant.
  11. One evening my father sat me down,
  12. spoke in the exaggerated tone
  13. adults adapt for children, asked
  14. if I knew who he was.
  15. Admiral Nimitz, of course, though
  16. I knew nothing of his command
  17. of the Pacific Fleet and was less impressed
  18. than if he'd landed a horseshoe.
  19. He was a calm man, a useful attribute
  20. for sending young men to their deaths.
  21. The only time I saw him upset,
  22. raccoons had invaded from their hideouts
  23. in the hills, attacked the goldfish in his pond,
  24. leaving muddy footprints as they escaped.
  25. As far as I knew, this was his only defeat

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