Julia Monaco is a freshman at Endicott College from Sandy Hook, CT. She is double majoring in International Business and Marketing, and has always enjoyed poetry and writing creatively. The poems she wrote each do not reflect one person, but pieces of the many stories she has heard of people throughout her life.
Rose
“A yellow paper rose twisted on a wire hanger in the closet.”
His
sweet aroma glides off his sweater just a hanger over.
It
lingers in the air,
I
inhale deeply and close my eyes,
There
he was.
Sitting
peacefully in his chair, tea in hand.
A
rose is hanging out of his shirt pocket.
I
open my eyes and he’s gone.
We
are gone.
Our
petals have fallen one-by-one.
Our
stem turned a corpsy brown and crumbled.
There
is nothing but a memory left of us.
A
memory of where we once stood proudly, unmoved by Earth,
Our
bright yellow and white colors illuminating our surroundings
Like
the radiant sun above us.
A
memory of a warm summer breeze passing through the yard.
Now
memories are beginning to fade
Like
the color in our petals before they dropped.
As
seasons come and go,
The
memory of you slips away.
--Julia Monaco
--Julia Monaco
Subtle message, but emotions bursting forth. Real feeling. Would like to read more from this poet.
ReplyDeleteSubtle emotions bursting forth. A fading love that is almost out of reach. Loved it!!!
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