Tuesday, June 10, 2008

ALMOST GROWN


She digs inside my make-up drawer
And claims she's almost grown,
Only three, this little one,
Heartaches of life, as yet, unknown.

Upon her cheeks she puts on rouge,
And paints her lips a shade of red,
She views herself and says she's pretty
And then she jumps up on my bed.

I look at her and I wonder
Was I ever, like her, so young?
Did, I too, say I am pretty
As on the bed, like her, I flung?

Her cheeks so fair and lips of pink,
She has for now no need of paint,
Into my world she wants to go,
She thinks it's something that it ain't.

She smiles wide with ruby lips
And claims that now she looks like me,
I smile at her and then I wonder,
What it is she views that I can't see.

On her I see her eyes of blue,
On me I see my mousy brown,
I see her face so soft and smooth,
While my own more like a clown.

I close the drawer and wash her face,
Returning her to a child of three;
I kiss her cheek and head out to play
With the dog and Heather and me.


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