Elegy for Summers at my Grandparents’ Pond
There was a time when I ran
faster than that red lab pup.
I scooped her up like a child;
I was one myself.
There was one June when I promised
I would learn to do a cartwheel.
I was more than content
to tumble through fields anyway.
There was a time when I lived
my entire life outdoors,
scaling trees and jumping wildly
into icy pond-scum waters.
Crawling out hands and knees,
up to the elbow in mud, soft in my fist.
I ran toward my father, desperate
to touch my hands to his clean skin.
That old dog is dead and gone now.
She outpaced me, but not for too long.
Copper faded to silver and too-big paws grew heavy.
Nothing more to be done.
No more swimming
No more running, tumbling
No more hands
No more time
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