Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Grandfather Shark

 

 

By most accounts he was a “mean cuss.”

But I mostly remember his bald head,

plaid shirts, and brown cigarettes filling up the tray

while he watched Hee Haw on TV.

 

He’d take some creaking steps

into Grandma’s kitchen where there’d be

a row of red tomatoes on the sill

lined up like the heads of decapitated carnations—

 

and fix up a raw beef patty,

take out his dentures, bite into it grinning like a shark,

and grow them back (pop them back in),

just like that.

 

He “did not play well with others,” and he

“liked to fight in the old days,” have ended

many stories I’ve since been told, sounding like

they were from the movies. 

But, in my innocence, and being the apple of his eye

until he died—I didn’t know you couldn’t play with sharks.

 

I also didn’t know until his funeral when I was six,

he’d fathered other children

besides my dad and his brothers,

when they stepped forward, swimming toward his casket

as if from some magic ocean closet

while a voice above named them, echoing sorrow.

 

I’ve since been trying to sort out what I got from him

that echoed on after that day—

brown eyes,

a little scrappiness,

the love of good cowboy (girl) boots,

a pocket watch,

Grandma’s heart.

 

O, Shark, you gave me some good stuff, you mean ol’ cuss.

 

 

© 2025 Jennifer Wagner 

 

Photo above of the man himself taken by my grandmother.  She won the car shown in 1958 in a raffle for $1. 

Word Garden Word List

dVerse

oln 

 

12 comments:

  1. I love this account of a man who was seen one way by some and another by others! The penultimate stanza is my favorite, with the newfound relations swimming up to the casket, Btw, those old bullet-nose Fords were fine!

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  2. Gah! I LOVE this! I can SEE him and feel like I know him. I can see his grin as he wolfs down a -raw? - yikes! - beef patty. I melted at the "Grandma's heart" line. Love it.

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  3. I too love this poem. It feels like I've really met him, knew him. There is so much to sort through when death comes.

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  4. I love it - I feel like I've had a glimpse of him through your eyes. Wonderful write.

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  5. You were loved and have the stories to tell. Beautiful memory. Blessings, xo, Selma

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  6. Sharks like this yours roll with the tumbleweeds and settle the sawdust, ghosts of heart whose bite was unforgettable. Love all the scrappy moments here.

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  7. This is such a vivid portrait of Grandfather Shark, Jennifer, that by the end of your poem I felt I knew him. I agree with Shay, that your portrait shows us how he was seen one way by some and another by others. And oh, that family secret, and the way it was revealed in these lines:
    ‘I also didn’t know until his funeral when I was six,
    he’d fathered other children
    besides my dad and his brothers,
    when they stepped forward, swimming toward his casket
    as if from some magic ocean closet’.

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  8. what a character you've drawn - so much heart in the details

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  9. I agree wholeheartedly with the others! A lovely portrait of Grandfather Shark, Jennifer! I especially like; "He’d take some creaking steps into Grandma’s kitchen where there’d be a row of red tomatoes on the sill." 🩷

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  10. Like a novel within your poem ~~~ I devoured this [in the best possible way!]

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  11. I, with no recollection of ever having met a grandparent, bow deeply to your recollective tribute. Awesome.

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  12. Love is not always a matter of deserving.

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Thank you for your thoughts!