Sunday, March 30, 2014
Universal Truths
I are not who you think I are . . . isn't it the same for us all? Measure me not by my past or my future, my crimes or my duties. Weigh a person's worth by that which is universally significant: the size and manufacturer of their flat screen TVs; the gaudiness of their obnoxiously useless diesel trucks.
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Ambulances
Knock knock . . .
Who's there?
Medics, sir. We received
an alert from this residence.
My soul instantly wilts.
Since Grandma was taken
three weeks ago, it could only be Grandpa
that they've now come for.
May we come in?
There's no saying NO . . .
I want to, but instead I say nothing.
I just meekly open the door.
They follow their sleek black pods
to the east bedroom, those medics with
grinning assistant drones and sidearms,
to find
Grandpa sitting in his favorite chair,
putting down his detective novel,
fake cover, smiling,
apparently not surprised to see our guests.
He makes to stand
NO, sit down,
then their pods are clicking and bleeping;
lights play across all our faces.
The medics nod, severe young men so
healthy and fit. This man is very sick,
says one . . .
Yes. He will need a doctor, says the other.
My soul that was wilted brittle plant matter
has just been incinerated so. So . . . Doctors.
Worse than we thought. The final cinching
of a noose first tied by handsome young medics.
Grandpa, always strong-armed and steel-willed,
again tries to stand, gently reason, and protest.
A reassuring smile, I'm fit and I'm fine–
then they strap him onto the gurney and wheel him out.
In the fading daylight we meet eyes,
Grandpa and us remaining three; but there are
no words, just fragile, trembling smiles. The ambulance
speeds away to join the others circling the block.
"Ambulances" Copyright © 2014 by D. Wickliff
Friday, March 14, 2014
Just pretend like I didn't say anything. Nothing at all. What a naughty, naughty little poem you are. You don't even deserve a title. Or dinner. I am so disappointed in you. Now you leave this blog this instant, and think about what you've done.
Thoroughly humiliated now, the prose hobbles away, off to sulk, and its blubbery sobs affect me only mildly. This is for its own good.
Thoroughly humiliated now, the prose hobbles away, off to sulk, and its blubbery sobs affect me only mildly. This is for its own good.
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