The Ring
By
John I. Blair
One day she caught her hand
On a hook she'd used
For hanging flowerpots
Atop the rough board fence
And yanked the ring
Right off her finger.
It bounced into the shaggy lawn;
And though we looked and looked
We could not find it.
And so we bought another,
Very like, a plain gold band,
No diamond and no milling,
What Dad could just afford
In 1938 in dusty Oklahoma.
And she thanked us kindly;
But it was too glossy and too new
And lacked the fine patina
That only sixty years of love can bring.
(c)2006 John I. Blair
Click on author's byline for bio.
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