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Shadows Of You MAG
Through the windows
of an aging photograph
I find us.
You glowing like you used to for me,
Before your casket laid open
welcoming a town full of frozen farewells.
In it
We sit on the chilled
Cement Steps of your house, with its paint faded
green and black iron shutters that rapped
in the sharp breezes,
Sucking the juices of bitter, hand-picked crab-apples;
And recounting
again and again
our prize collection of swindled marbles.
I'm brought back to October
when the winter winds blew -
cutting air, in from the east,
And leaves, like fall's quilt,
making simple obstacles in our journeys with all the miniature
tornadoes.
I remember some days after lunch
we'd lose ourselves in stalks of high corn
that stretched in unmapped mazes;
sweet smelling and suspicious of our purpose,
towering over our crystal eyes.
I'd have followed you on any trip to find a tree-fort palace
or a tractor-driving king.
Looking back now
through the cracking window
I see shadows of all you could have been.
Your soul escapes through sandy-blue eyes
like stolen marbles polished bright in my shaking possession.
These are reminders,
like your swords
of all those matchbox car smiles and rainy afternoons you gave me.
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