I Knew You But A Moment

Home

****
WELCOME BACK. HERE'S WHAT'S NEW.
****
SHORT STORIES:
Serene Eternity
A Bad Case Of Writer's Block
The Village
Bridge From A Snowy Place
The Neighborhood Eight And A. Jones
Nightsounds
The Birdman of Carter's Lake
***
Neverland by A.M.Sullivan
Photographs by Brett Talley
Saved By Mr. F.Scott Fitzgerald by Allen Woodman
The Loneliness of the Late-Night Donut Shop by Gary L. Eikenberry
****
A NOVELETTE:
The Ending is the Beginning
The Adventure Begins
Paris
A Step Into Eternity
Epiphany
Love is Eternal
****
POETRY:
Small Pain In My Chest by Michael Mack
***
Poetry of Jim Kittelberger
The Factory
The Butterfly
Glowing Embers
Endless Conversation
I Knew You But A Moment
Obsolete
Rain
I Thought About Death Today
The Spiders Web
Midnight Train
Fathers, Sons and Grandsons
Be A Man, They Say
When I Daydream
The Hummer and the Horse
****
Poetry By Kersh
Coffee Shop by Alan Goodson
Lost In War by Ben Siragusa
The Soldier by Leslie Burchard
Poetry of Jerry Vilhotti
Masters Poetry
World Poetry Audio Library
****
CHILDRENS TALES
Sad Samantha the Sparrow
A Very Special Creation
Professor Knowitalls Magnifient? Invention
The Ring
Whiffers
***
Grimm Fairy Tales and Anderson Fairy Tales
Aesops Fables
Bedtime-Story
****
ESSAYS:
The Street
The Internet
A Renewable Joy
Contentment
I've Been Mile-Stoned
A Gift of Louie
Word Phun
Baseball, I Love It.
Retirement Plans
Hometown
A Retired Man's Period of Adjustment
__________
Walter Mills
Mable and Elsie Are Leaving
At The Middle Passage
On The Road Again
__________
Bumper Bites by Tina Bennett-Kastor
__________
Jim Hightower
****
PHILOSOPHY
Katharine Hunt 'What A Wonderful World'
****
TRAVEL
Israel
Israel-Part II
Canada
****
FOOD
In The Kitchen With HazyJ
The Cookbook of HazyJ
****
The Twentieth Century-Decade by Decade
****
The 100 Best Novels of the Twentieth Century
****
BOOK REVIEWS
****
LINKS
****
Contact Me
THE PUBLIC READER


I KNEW YOU BUT A MOMENT
By Jim Kittelberger



The glider swayed back and forth
until finally, I was aware only of the motion
and the small breeze it created as I surrendered
to the repetitions and its ability to close out
all but the pleasure of the moment.


My eyes surrendered
and closed.


I may have dozed, I don't know
until I became aware that my ears were taking me into
that world where imagination reigns.


I sat in the silence of the afternoon, alone,
thoroughly content, my mind a blank canvas until
the familiar sound of locusts working the trees drew me home. The sun
directly above my head told me it was noon and very warm.
Grass under my bare feet, a slingshot in my back pocket put the
year at 1944, and I immediately felt the shattering loneliness return.
Tears which I tried so hard to hide came unbidden to run down my cheeks.
I lie under the big maple and weep and remember.



My big brother Ned and I had sat together under this same big maple
on the day he left. He told me once again that he loved me, and when he came home from the war, he would teach me how to throw a curve and all about the mysteries of girls, as he poked me with his elbow, and I blushed.


Then he promised me he would be back safe and sound.


He lied to me.




I grieve every day of my life for my big brother Ned, for all that
he has missed, but in fact it is I for whom I grieve, for the time I could
have had with him. Ned abides with all his fellows who lived
abbreviated lives, unfinished lives, unfulfilled lives, while we
who knew them wonder why, as we weep once more.




Copyright Jim Kittelberger 2001.