Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Papa
Papa
I remember that day.
I did all my morning chores
up to my knees in mud,
came back to the house
to clean my boots up,
and there he was,
proud as punch
in my overshoes.
How could I begrudge his fun?
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Monday, April 18, 2016
Mama
Mama
We went back to Nebraska
just that once.
My brother's wealth was hard
on your Pa.
All of it --
tidy barn, grass in the yard,
and Jack in hand-me-downs
holding tight
to that car,
not wanting to leave it
for our dry and dusty
struggle of a farm.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Papa
Papa
Jack was always a joker,
using the animals
for some prank or scheme,
but Lewis loved them
deep and hard.
They were a team:
Lewis,
his Bonnie dog,
and Queenie --
the old mare
who was so patient,
so gentle with Lizzy and Henry.
Lewis has been gone nearly a year,
but whenever a car comes into the yard
they both look up hopefully.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Mama
Mama
This one takes me right back
to the day of my mama's funeral --
Lewis playing "Amazing Grace,"
sitting there in a kitchen chair
at the edge of her beloved garden.
The one place
in all this endless brown dryness
where there was color and life.
That's what her garden was -- an amazing grace.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Friday, April 15, 2016
Lizzy
Lizzy
When Lewis' first model plane
took off like a dream on the first try,
is that when you knew
he'd be a pilot someday?
How he loved to tell that story.
Now, whenever a plane goes buzzing through,
I look up and imagine him there,
beyond "the surly bonds of Earth,"
"Up, up the long delirious burning blue..."
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
(with a hat tip to John Magee's "High Flight")
If you're new to my National Poetry Month project, you can go back to April 1, 2016 and read forward to catch the story line. Or you can go here and click on the link(s) under the pictures.
Michelle has the Poetry Friday Roundup this week at Today's Little Ditty.
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Papa
Papa
Yes, indeed.
That's me.
Star of the team.
Valedictorian of my class, too.
If you work hard,
I believe you can succeed
at whatever
you aim for.
Of course, when it comes to wheat
a farmer can work his tail off
and the weather decides
what will be.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Henry and Lizzy
Henry and Lizzy
Who's that, Mama?
The one in the middle
marked with an X?
He's so young
and handsome!
Tell us how you met!
I never knew
that once upon a time
Papa played trumpet!
Did he bring you
flowers? Candy?
...How could you forget?!?
Can I have it?
May I have it?
Pleeeeease, may I have it?
I never knew
that once upon a time
Papa played trumpet!
Did he bring you
flowers? Candy?
...How could you forget?!?
Can I have it?
May I have it?
Pleeeeease, may I have it?
Papa gave it to Jack
when he enlisted?
...I guess that's best...
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Mama
Mama
I've got enough work
to fill three days,
but here I sit,
mooning over the photo book.
Mama, I wish you'd look up
from your prize houseplants and chat a bit.
Help me figure out how to go on --
my two big boys gone to war --
one on a ship, one in a cockpit --
my little girl suddenly a woman, and lovesick --
the youngest just trying to find his way,
figuring out where he fits in all this.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Monday, April 11, 2016
Papa
Papa
That Jack.
He pestered me
like a horsefly
on a mule.
Just had to have my picture.
Stood me beside
the car, but made sure
the mistake he made after the dance
was hidden behind.
I was madder than a hornet that night.
Reckless, ungrateful son-of-a-gun.
But I can't help myself. He makes me smile.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Mama
Mama
Got a photo postcard today
from my brother who stayed
back on the old place
north of Concordia
when the rest of us moved to Colorado.
Looks like they've got no complaints.
"Richard on Eds shoulder,
he couldn't look out. Mrs. and myself
in our oats field, it made 62 bu."
We watch the clouds build up in the west,
watch them pass by our fields,
watch them continue east to deliver their rain.
It's sure enough dry here -- nearly desert.
But there's a beauty in it, and we are learning
to lean into the wind and weather. We'll stay.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2016
Labels:
bygones,
original,
Poetry Month 2016,
story in verse
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