The Barrel
for Grandad

The barrel in the back yard brims
with rainwater all year round,

crowned with a thin film
of dead flies which you slice

with the flat of your palm,
splashing your feet and mine.

Dipping into the water
with your potato-muck hands,

you rinse your face
with winter rain

and stand and glean the dirt
from under each nail

with your dulled pocket knife.
You motion, it’s my turn,

and I laugh because I long
to do what you do,

to share in this, your ritual.
But I hear the kitchen sink

hissing out freshness,
and I leave you

to the rhythm of it,
to your little order of things.
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