IceM
08-19-2011, 03:51 AM
On summer evenings
I picture us standing beside the falls—
How the setting sun’s final rays poked through the poinsettia patch,
as droplets of mist,
tinged with crimson against a sanguine sky,
graced our sunburned skin.
Autumn smelled of saffron and the nightly bonfire.
As fresh cedar and pine chips crackled like your joints,
you’d gesture to the heavens,
where stars,
silver, like the tail of Tancho’s Comet,
shimmered with humble incandescence on the midnight
face of the lake.
It was to here where we would steal with baskets full of apples
and fresh cinnamon—our midnight snack.
How fascinating it was, in Winter,
that after every “glomp” in the lake’s center,
our eburnean pebbles would cast endless ripples,
shimmers the color of the cesious sky,
towards us. At night, we
would tromp home through snow,
racing against the rainstorms
towards our cabin
together.
Time ebbed on. Spring,
with viridian water-lilies,
beckoned us outside. Towards the meadows we marched,
where we picked orchids,
purple like the boysenberry stains on my clothing.
And the dahlias,
cinnabar like your faded dress,
would intermix with California poppies and blooming violets
and span across the meadow, a subtle
diminuendo in color that, you said,
resembled your daily mood.
You’d hold my hand as we returned at night
and guide me to your favourite spot,
where, in the meadow, moonflowers grew.
Now they adorn your grave.
I picture us standing beside the falls—
How the setting sun’s final rays poked through the poinsettia patch,
as droplets of mist,
tinged with crimson against a sanguine sky,
graced our sunburned skin.
Autumn smelled of saffron and the nightly bonfire.
As fresh cedar and pine chips crackled like your joints,
you’d gesture to the heavens,
where stars,
silver, like the tail of Tancho’s Comet,
shimmered with humble incandescence on the midnight
face of the lake.
It was to here where we would steal with baskets full of apples
and fresh cinnamon—our midnight snack.
How fascinating it was, in Winter,
that after every “glomp” in the lake’s center,
our eburnean pebbles would cast endless ripples,
shimmers the color of the cesious sky,
towards us. At night, we
would tromp home through snow,
racing against the rainstorms
towards our cabin
together.
Time ebbed on. Spring,
with viridian water-lilies,
beckoned us outside. Towards the meadows we marched,
where we picked orchids,
purple like the boysenberry stains on my clothing.
And the dahlias,
cinnabar like your faded dress,
would intermix with California poppies and blooming violets
and span across the meadow, a subtle
diminuendo in color that, you said,
resembled your daily mood.
You’d hold my hand as we returned at night
and guide me to your favourite spot,
where, in the meadow, moonflowers grew.
Now they adorn your grave.