He Lived—Childhood Summers

H
He lived—childhood summers
thru bare feet
then years of money’s lack
and heat

beside the river—out of flood
came his wood, dog,
woman, lost her, daughter—
prologue

to planting trees. He buried carp
beneath the rose
where grass-still
the marsh rail goes.

To bankers on high land
he opened his wine tank.
He wished his only daughter
to work in the bank

but he’d given her a source
to sustain her—
a weedy speech,
a marshy retainer.
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