My Grandfather’s Hands
My hands are no longer young.
The skin is aged, sun browned,
a bit wrinkled, with spots.
There are scars,
visible memories
of the wounds that plague and grace a life.
They are strong, firm still,
capable,
my grandfather’s hands,
the hands I remember as a boy,
gazing at with amazement ,
covered with dust from the fields,
holding the wheel
of his pickup,
that behemoth of the fifties
all fenders and steel,
a magic chariot with faded red paint,
and he, the magician
able to fix tractors
and a teenage boy’s soul
with equal grace.
And now, you look down
and see the same skin
covering your soul
and wonder if he felt his wisdom
or, like you,
made it up
as he went along?
About this poem
The hands in the picture are my sons, a few years ago. My hands, alas, are beginning to look like my father’s and his father’s before him.
Tom

Beautifully written!
Really, really enjoyed this poem, Tom
Thank you so much Margie!