Slap of the screen door, flat knock of my grandmother's boxy black shoes on the wooden stoop, the hush and sweep of her knob-kneed, cotton-aproned stride out to the edge and then, toed in with a furious twist and heave, a bridge that leaps from her hot red hands and hangs there shining for fifty years over the mystified chickens, over the swaying nettles, the ragweed, the clay slope down to the creek, over the redwing blackbirds in the tops of the willows, a glorious rainbow with an empty dishpan swinging at one end.
Poem recommended by:
Tracy Moore
Library Staff
Why I chose this poem:
I chose this poem because I love the imagery of the poet's grandmother, caught in one moment of time. The beauty of dishwater - caught in a rainbow arc. Quiet sounds of nature all around. A moment that is caught for all-time. And the importance of noticing those beautiful moments within each of our days.
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