by Samuel Dumas
The Pruning Years The years she has left in her body Age-tremor in her left hand, Yet her eyes still dance Like the old cities in the East; And the grace she once loved Is given away: some china doll Now smiles with her face. Like a templed butterfly In its chrysolite cowl She reaches down to my vernal flame; My measured grasp of her hello Palms her winged hand; My mind loses to her zithered timber While the lifespan in me Blends in her beam, then...disbands; I search within my sacred smoke For clear words to say, but only find A requited mother's honor that Effleurages forth with the tillage of flowers I now must share in her pruning years Where all blossoms tremble to live Then inevitably fall as fruit. —Dumas fils
As an educator no part of the Bible is of greater value than are its biographies. Conversely extended: for a biographee, what they are is what has been written (educated) into them; these inner-man things are what they will love writing about....
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