A little research reveals she is nearly
One hundred fifteen years of age, born in New York
She was… eight beautiful and dainty turned legs
Support her solid black walnut continence
Her original owner liked to cross his right leg
His boots scarred her lower left inside drawer supports
I discovered her outside under another
Old desk, both stored under an old tarp, mud and
Spiders along with a bird’s nest liberally
Housing themselves in every nook and cranny
Her once magnificent finish now bubbled
Scarred with her learned songs and time-worn history
I wonder did she once assist with Latin lessons
Or with a young student’s finest penned flourishes
Did she give the gift of wanderlust?
As she taught about the Galapagos
A little gel stripper proved she cleans up well
A clear of coat min-wax restored her lovely rosy glow
Oh her long journey’s scars remain under
Her new redo, but she does stand stoically proud and renewed
In purpose, begging off on a good re-
Sanding …lecturing wittily on an important and wise life lesson
We all fall prey to predatory wrinkles and faded
Exteriors, even our very souls are scoffed
Yet our heart cores are still tenderly sheltered
Deep within, and those old pulls are actually
Copper-ey bronze and filled with redheaded determined grit
To stay on task, a job description now transformed
From those old drawers come lessons in molecular biology
Anatomy and physiology, the healing arts are now her newer gifts
(Refinishing Life, Tennessee,18 May 2007)
Debora Short
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-teacher-s-desk-edited/