Read me the paper Uncle
Loud enough to hear in the kitchen
Touch it for me, turn those pages
Aunties and I are cooking the dinner
hands must be kept clean.
But in your place by the fire
the beige recliner squeaks
on the back-beat of your rocking,
toes slide in and out of slippers
leather stretched out and soft
as a first basemen’s glove
Calloused hands turn each inky page
of the Sunday review
headlines shout at us
while we chop onions
Shannon Laws is an award-winning poet, performer, and advocate for the arts. She has been recognized with two Mayor’s Arts Awards and the Dr. Asha Bhargava Memorial Award — Community Champion. Shannon is the author of five poetry books and publishes Corridor, a free monthly poetry zine.
She lives in Bellingham, Washington.
View more posts
2 thoughts on “Poem: Ink Stained Hands”
Thank you still life, for all your visits and great comments. My Uncle, would really shout out the stories to us. Its a warm memory.
Thank you still life, for all your visits and great comments. My Uncle, would really shout out the stories to us. Its a warm memory.
LikeLike
Love the duet of goings on in this poem. Captures a precious family moment.
LikeLike