HARVEYA Poem by Ellen HammondHARVEY Harvey was just a boy in the 'Roaring Twenties"
When his family split apart Making him seem different in his time Short and slight and the youngest child As a target for bullies, he was prime So he learned to survive as best he could With a tough and obnoxious shell He lived with his mother, then his dad And then with an uncle as well He felt he was an unwanted child A terrible nuisance at home Bounced about and abused in countless ways
'Til at twelve he was left on his own He drifted about from place to place Searching for his call Then he found a friend to ease his pain Its name was alcohol At first with this friend he was happy He was brave and knew no fright It became a game to clear out the bars He was a scrapper who loved a good fight Then one day he met a woman
With problems of her own Her husband committed bigamy She was raising four children, all alone He found someone to care for him In this woman they called Lin It was a mutual attraction Soon they shared their life of sin For years they drank together Enjoying a common friend Abusing and neglecting the children Causing problems without end Five children were born from this union But the last one died at birth And Lin repented of her erring ways She wanted a life of worth Then her eyes were opened And she could plainly see Though alcohol seemed to be a friend It was really an enemy She gave up all her drinking Banning liquor from their place But Harvey's faith was not so strong His reality he could not face At times he would stay sober 'Til the memories started to come He couldn't bear to face the truth Or admit to the things he'd done So he pushed and drove all love away Until again he was on his own There was only one friend he would let inside The bottle became his home Through the years his children tried to help him But their families he would abuse Eventually they all avoided him For when drunk, he was very bad news He drifted about as a loner Craving love almost as much as booze He was growing old but still causing fights Only then he was starting to lose At seventy-three his heart gave out He drifted into the dark unknown Then he called on the name he'd often cursed "Jesus, help! Don't leave me alone." The Lord heard his feeble cry of fear As the doctors jump-started his heart He granted him yet another year And with his daughters, a brand new start One of them took him into her home And discovered his sentimental side For sober and sick, without his friend He had nowhere to hide For months they grew to know him Without a drop of liquor to drink But as he began to feel better He also started to think He saw how his life he had wasted
By pushing his loved ones aside Now, he wouldn't become a burden As long as he still had some pride He didn't want their pity And he thought he had pushed them too far So haunted by memories and familiar guilt He headed for the local bar There he found his old friend waiting In its warm and welcoming disguise He had no way of knowing This time it would cause his demise As we looked at his frail, lifeless body All the scars and broken bones he'd acquired We knew no one could judge him harder He received all the punishment he desired As only two of us stood by his coffin We had no peace from above Did he reject the second chance he was given The same way he rejected our love? We couldn't really blame all the others For not even bothering to show He'd pushed them away so often And his good side they never did know But my mind goes back to my childhood Before his drinking got worse He was the one who encouraged me To write down my feelings in verse So his life did account for something My memories of him aren't all bad And I pray the Lord shows his soul mercy For Harvey was really my dad (c)Ellen hammond © 2009 Ellen HammondFeatured Review
Reviews
|
Stats
714 Views
13 Reviews Shelved in 3 Libraries
Added on March 5, 2009Last Updated on March 6, 2009 Author
Related WritingPeople who liked this story also liked..
|