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These Hands Tell storeis
We sat on the porch
 My grandfather and I
 As the crickets sand their sweet lullaby 
 
 The sun was setting,
 Leaving the sky the colour of the pink lemonade in our sweating glasses
 
 The porch swing creaked
 In the evening breeze
 That rolled through the country
 Rustling the trees
 
 We sat on the porch
 My grandfather and I
 As the sound of his voice harmonized with the chirping birds
 
 I lent him my ear and he lent me his story
 
 His words took me on a journey
 Over oceans and deserts,
 Through triumphs and sorrows,
 Meadows, memories
 
 We sat on the porch
 My grandfather and I 
 As the blazing orange sun disappeared over the swaying pine trees
 
 As he pulls back the curtain
 As the levee breaks
 As the tales of adventure lead me through the corridors of his mind
 
 I glance at his hands
 
 The worn, creased fingers
 Tough like the bark of a tree
 Yet soft, gentle
 
 These are the hands that twirled and swung my grandmother on the dance floor
 
 That healed the wounds of soldiers fighting for the freedom of their country
 
 That steered the handlebars of his little girl’s first bicycle
 
 That held that little girl through scraped knees, heartbreaks, and the death of her mother
 
 That lay a delicate crimson rose on my grandmother’s grave every year on their anniversary
 
 The hands that sit across from me in the fading dapple light 
 
 We sat on the porch
 My grandfather and I 
 As the night’s crisp breath lingers on my neck
 
 The sweet timeworn gentleman sits next to me
 Fragile with age
 He chokes on his words
 Crystal tears run along his wrinkled cheeks
 I take his fingers in mine
 
 He does not need to continue,
 For I’ve already known
 
 These hands tell stories
 All their own

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