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Adelaide and I

Poetry, Short Stories, et al

Posts tagged with "Death"

To Dad and Mom

, , , ...

I faced the stone with downcast mien;
Before the words: Beloved husband
And father, John. May he rest with
The peace so worthy of his gentle heart.

And joined with his soul in glory earned,
Is the weary soul of his Beloved Wife---
Mother of four. May Gertrude rest
with peace as John. Amen.

We miss them with our saddened
Souls, and repent not being
With them in their final days of
Pain.

This strange Earth of
Contradictory feelings and beliefs
Witnessed their lifelong hard work.
Success comes in many guises,
Not only wealth of dollars, but
Wealth of spirit. They had it.

May they rest in peace.

m1

Bulldog

, ,

“I love you fellow. You warm me when I’m cold. You cheer me when I’m sad.”

The panting bulldog slowly inched his way over the bed closer to the reclining boy. His tail wagged exuberantly as the frail hand reached out and softly stroked the smooth brown coat.

“You’re a good dog, fellow. Someday, we’ll roam the park together and play the games we’ve only been able to talk about. I know we will. I know we will.”

A murmur of agreement reached him as his hand slowed its movement on the journey to sleep.

The bulldog nudged its head under the boy’s hand to urge a continuation of the soothing contact. The boy smiled and gently stroked him again. He saw only warmth and affection in the glistening black eyes peering at him through the ever deepening twilight and shadows. The grotesque limbs of an ancient oak futilely guarded the window from the approaching darkness---but disappeared in it as they were overwhelmed.

The boy slept, his hand wrapped gently around the warm, comforting presence of the bulldog. The ticking of the ship’s clock on the wall measured the silence with a rhythmic beat. The growing shadow of the dark hid the souvenirs and knickknacks of his young life: Dodgers’ pennant; signed baseball; cap and mitt; Cub Scout derby racecar; merit badge sash. They all seemed so distant now. A gyroscope.

A quickly increasing light suddenly broke the darkness as the bedroom door opened. A mother’s soft voice spoke to her husband in the hushed whisper of a sick room visitor.

“He’s asleep again. George, he’s been sick so long and sometimes I’m so afraid I won’t be with him when the time comes. Soon, he’ll sleep forever, and we might miss him those last few moments.”

With tears moistening her cheeks, she turned to bury her face at her husband’s chest. George comforted her as best he could and gazed past her to the boy on the bed.

“He’s happy; it shows. Ever since he was visited by that magician friend of yours from Connorsville, he’s been happy. He knows he won’t be with us much longer, but he’s happy.”

Tears filled his eyes, too, as he tightly embraced his wife in mutual sadness.

“There was magic in that man; Billy’s been so peaceful these past few weeks…”

He stopped and stared at the bed.
“There it is again.”

“There is what again, George?”

Mary straightened with apprehension and dabbed her reddened eyes with a tissue. She watched her husband quietly approach the bed, bend over, and remove something to the floor near the corner. He returned to the doorway, closed the door, and, together, they slowly made their way to the front room.

“It’s that ceramic bulldog,” he said as he drew his wife closer. “I simply don’t understand how he gets that heavy thing up on the bed with him.”

© 2005

Scott Is Sadly Gone

,

Written about my cousin, Scott, who lost his life
in a work accident. He was in his 20s.
***

Again a Hand must beckon one,
Another call be given;
And glows once more with Angel-steps
The path which reaches Heaven.

Our young and gentle Scott, whose smile
Could brighten summer hours,
Amid the frosts of autumn time
Departed with the flowers.

No paling of his cheeks of health
Forewarned us of the day;
No shadow from the Silent Land
Fell round our brother's way.

We miss him in this time of tears
And wish again his light;
A pause beside his image hears
Once more his fond “Goodnight!”

Now falls a shadow on the day,
His smile no longer cheers;
The dimness o'er the stars of night,
Be eyes that look through tears.

The light of his young life went down,
As sinks behind the hill
The beauty of a setting star,
Sudden clear, then still.

So pure and strong, his fair brow seemed
Eternal as the sky;
And like the brook's low song, his voice---
A sound which should not die.

The promptings of the kindest deeds
Were in his very look;
We read his face, as one who reads
A true and honest book;

The sharing of his active life
Was welcome like the dew;
And we who near his goodness passed
Like gentle blossoms grew.

And we---we felt he needed not
This changing of his sphere
To give to Heaven a Shining One,
Who walked a good man here.

And so we see our Father's will;
Our thoughts have reconciled:
That He whose love exceeding ours
Has taken home His child.

Fold him, O Father! In Your arms,
And let him henceforth be
A messenger of love between
Our saddened hearts and Thee.

Still let his kind words stand
Between us and all wrong,
Uplifting memory serve to make
Our faith in Goodness strong.

And grant that You who calms our fears
With all your purest powers,
Will welcome Scott to eternal home
From one of love in ours.


© As adapted, revised, and edited from John Greenleaf Whittier's “Gone.”