“Falling, Drifting”
On a gentle day with light breeze,
yellow Aspen leaves falling, drifting,
from full-faded, forgotten pages,
free of all half-truths in endgame
afterlife, the alien weight, the
plague, the black death signalling,
nothing up ahead, save blue haze
at signpost 279 obscuring her dewy throne
while moving through the pass into a
dry country only to find and feel the
weight of being in her presence, even if
she was not there when you died.
“At Heathrow”
A random stranger at Heathrow
circling a famous author
like he was a holy leper or the
corridor was the shallow – and not wide –
Rubicon waiting to be crossed or
Cadillac Mountain to be climbed,
all variations on a theme as if
he were poor Dostoevsky at Semenovski Square
heavy Thomas Wolfe seeing James Joyce
the day just half done, feeling like a blood thief,
with time become an arrow and the
baboon cliffs in his mind searched
for a lingua franca, a Hemingway hotel,
Dickens in America, even Faulkner in Paris
to overturn the hourglass, its grains descending
until, like an orphan, all that remains is the
memory of the final, the last contact.
“Memories”
Well, we all know by now that
God is a metaphor and that it is
what it is and it’s all captured
in the bleating of a blind kid’s cry and
there’s no ultimate metamorphosis,
no eternal running down Highway 65
looking to see if he, or anyone, is coming –
even from 32,000 feet in an ice storm
over Nairobi when you know full well that
there is not the slightest chance that anyone,
anywhere, will ever even believe you
now and that you can never,
no matter how much you want to,
take back those memories and
make them your own again – never.
J. B. Hogan has published over 280 stories and poems, as well as eleven books, including Bounty Riders, Bar Harbor (short fiction), Time and Time Again, Mexican Skies, Tin Hollow, Living Behind Time, Losing Cotton, The Rubicon, Fallen (short fiction), The Apostate, and Angels in the Ozarks (nonfiction, local professional baseball history). He also was a contributing researcher and writer for The Square Book (local history). He lives in Fayetteville, Arkansas.
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