“as a child, I remember the hum of the sea / as you sang for me from /
 the pages of the old dictionary,
 / beaten blue cover on the /
 definitions of your long-dead youth”
as a child, I remember the hum of the sea
 as you sang for me from
 the pages of the old dictionary,
 beaten blue cover on the
 definitions of your long-dead youth;
 stories swimming with spirits.
 I listened as you slipped sand
 through the creases of your soul.
I remember how you made
 corpses waltz in grey satin dresses
 across my sky. you told me to
 listen to the old man playing
 fiddle from the foam of the sea
 and the trumpet calls ripped
 from the gulls’ frosted throats.
you defined love as a ghost
 who holds your hand and
 wanders the beaches, blowing sand
 out of seashells and holding them, too.
 you told me love’s face floats in the corners
 of your soul, translucent and kind.
 as I lay with my head in your silken lap,
 you told me you loved me.
I still believe you.
 I remember the day we wandered
 the graveyard and blew out the flames of
 dandelions, because you told me a wish is planted
 in every person you help find their wings.
 that day, I knew what you meant
 when you told me to keep making
 the dead smile and sing.