I was cleaning a drawer
Filled with documents and such.
A book I had stashed away
Peeped out from a corner.
It had your poems and accounts
And an old, faded rose.
I forgot if you or I had saved the bloom,
But your handwriting was enough
To send me into a spiral.
The pages of the book were yellow,
Your words were written in pencil,
Your handwriting curvy
And almost illegible.
It was a struggle;
Then your voice
Shone in the words.
The first paragraph I read
Struck me—like a surprise hug.
It was about a sadness
And a wait—like all of life,
With dried petals caught in between.
You reached out to tell me
The written word means much;
It finds light and memory
Through life’s corners in dirty drawers.

A podcast episode about a letter the author found in a lost corner of a drawer. The only difference is that he wrote it himself
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