This Cup

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  • Loss

    This Cup

    Her cup packed in a dress, my mother wore;
    whose years foregone, the valued cup and garb
    were left to me in care, forevermore.
    The frock, I wear in diner chair by harbor
    light, with cup, tonight; I sit and think
    how love was sterling when she squeezed my hand
    through family tales galore! For now, I drink
    tinged tender warmth, and listen to the band
    with her green grail clutched in my grip, where urbane
    words flow down my pen. This cup, a din
    of thunders in the night, pours past its earthen
    mouth, now into mine. I dine, till when?

    A child, this cup, snugged in lamenting palms;
    this cup of tears, who knew her soothing psalms.

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    Poetry is not an expression of the party line. It's that time of night, lying in bed, thinking what you really think, making the private world public, that's what the poet does.

    Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997) U.S. poet.

    AngelClementine’s Poems (5)

    Title Comments
    Title Comments
    Bronze-Blue Light 0
    This Cup 0
    Hunkered Down 0
    D's For Daddy 1
    "I'm Sorry For Your Loss" 4