An old teapot
An old teapot
Sat on top of the dresser
Stuffed with cash
So she said
From her bed in the corner
At least, that is what I remember
Of Grandma
A head full of myth and taboo
The grime of life
Rimed to her skin
From too much grovelling
At people's door step
Whitewashing
Working for pennies
Fingernails black and broken
From the dirt in her garden
A patchwork of vegetables
And herbs.
Some to eat,
Some to cheat the ravages of time
A hot poultice
To take the pain away
She never saw a doctor
Never saw the need
They killed Grandad with
Bloodletting
Apparently
Although to my mind
They stopped that practice
In the nineteenth century
It was the cave-in
At the coal face
That did for him
But she had her own story
More bloody than gory
Full of derring do and glory
The way she told it
He was a hero
Who gave his life
And saved his men
She never missed
An anniversary
Took us all along with her
To stand at the grave,
We stood, she prayed.
I remember her pain
Every time she got up
She cursed the doorstep
Of number four
The pit manager’s door,
Hands raw
From scrubbing and cleaning
Her eyes, rimmed with tears
Or so it seemed to me.
She was a hoarder
Of stories
She smelled of home
Apple pie and ginger wine
Every penny saved
Shoved into that old teapot
For a rainy day
It must have rained a lot
As she was always
Divvying it out
To this person or to that
With change left over
To give us kids a threepenny piece
For our
Money box
Every Sunday.