Dad at 2, right, with his father and brothers. |
Dad knew quite a bit about bad poetry.
While cleaning out the garage this past summer, I found a folder of long, badly-rhymed "odes" that Dad evidently wrote about work and Navy Reserve colleagues as anniversary or retirement gifts.
He also knew quite a bit about good poetry. Mom still fondly recalls how he used to recite Shakespeare to her.
At his best, like all of us, he had the soul of a poet. He worked for the telephone company; he wanted to be an architect.
Mom and I still talk about (and sometimes "to") Dad. It would have been his 89th birthday today, but he died when he was 73.
Holding a pitchfork, with his mother (who shared his birthday and would have been 120 today) at the wheel. |
There's no "Ode to Dad" in the folder I found in the garage.
These fragments will have to do:
1. Shark-skin suits and Navy dress whites
2. A 13-year-old sandlot pitcher snapping off a tightly spun sinker
3. A 16-year-old's calligraphy drawing of Christ's last words
4. The smell of Old Spice and hair gel
5. Cigarette smoke (Kents)
6. Eggs over easy, bacon and rye toast
7. A round stain of bourbon on the counter of a bar
8. Crafting a too-perfect Pinewood Derby car
9. A 32-year-old storming a convent to defend his son
10. The intricate paint job on a precision plastic model of the U.S.S. Midway
11. Mills Brother records
12. Sentimental tears
A beautiful tribute to your Dad.
ReplyDeleteMissing dad............. Lovely. You have all the best of him.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joe, and thank you, Kathy!
ReplyDeletePlease, where can I read the story behind "A 32-year-old storming a convent to defend his son"?
ReplyDelete