In Memory of George

George

You looked like a clay/mockup you,

a rough portrait study bust devoid

of hair and beard, lying in that coffin,

swaddled in unfamiliar satin and suit.

Without hair, your nose stood out,

pitted, more bulbous than I recalled,

scarred where the dog bull-baited

you while you, on all fours, earned

a hard day’s wage laying carpet.

You were hardly you, even discounting death,

without your ginger hair and beard;

a small Sasquatch some have joked;

some with affection; others cruelly.

Your soul mirrored only the gentlest

of beast to me.  At  M’s graduation

in a too small jacket & wrinkled tie,

slicked red hair and beard awry you

drew looks even in our red-neck town.

I remember you above all others;

you blessed our hearts by being there.

The preacher couldn’t help but mention

your “troubled life” as if perfection was just

a matter of choice and our duty was to judge.

He seemed to care little of your nature;

if only he had recalled your soft mumbling

voice, strangely soothing to my ears,

or your eyes’ sparkle hidden now behind

sealed lids, or your generous heart and smile.

We, the ones that love you, gathered

to stand and wave as you took one last

glance at this often cruel world with an

over-the-shoulder smile and slipped

into the welcoming, singing trees.

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