anthology
contemporary

    Zoom text


Childhood

Gwyneth Box

 
This poem first appeared in Candelabrum Vol XI Number 1, July 2002
 
Whispering secrets into an empty cocoa tin,
string, taut, measuring the distance between us;
I was squaw to your brave,
target for your cap-gunned cop and cowboy.

We caught butterflies on the buddleia -
peacocks, tortoiseshells, red admirals -
and netted minnows (I caught mostly weed)
down in the brown brook in the park.

Jumpers for wicket, you taught me
to hold the bat and strike out firm and strong.
Staunchly, I held back the tears:
the leather ball struck hard.

Tins and pistols rusted into silence long ago;
nets rotted, bamboo handles split.
The butterflies have flown away;
their colours paint my dreams.

previous next
back to top
search help
home
members' area
register
site map
printer friendly
previous page

a letter from your editor

Get Acrobat Reader


Patchword shop (payments by PayPal)

Copyright Publishing service Write for Patchword
© Copyright 2000-2007 GEB and contributing authors.
All rights reserved.
Photos and illustrations: GEB.

Patchword is a product of
Tantamount Publishing

Tantamount S.L.
Patchword works in association with Tantamount Publishing to provide full editorial and publishing services:
See services page for details.