Purgatory
thou
shalt not steal
or
feel
or
deal from the bottom
of
the deck (no matter
how
stacked against you)
so
help you
god
almighty will strike you
dead,
deader
than
a doornail
or
email never sent,
you
will go to Purgatory
and
sit, waiting, 20,000 years
with
hands in your lap, speaking
only
when spoken to, the
magazines
on the rack
dog-eared,
thumbed through:
LIFE,
LOOK, HIGHLIGHTS
(find
the hidden items in the
picture:
cat, dog, key, mouse,
louse,
yourself...) the nurse
will
call when God is ready.
Abe
a
new book out
on
Lincoln
I
read--
I've
read a lot
of
them, books
on
Lincoln:
not
a city lot
or a
car lot
but
a load of
books
on
Lincoln,
that
son of a gun,
that
turkey;
his
wife was kind of a witch
his
son became kind of rich
and
he managed
his
war better
than
Johnson
done.
Bill
the
table slides into
place--
the
booth is a capsule
I am
riding into
space
with
the New York Times beside
me;
the
waitress,
a
distant galaxy
hovering
in
space/time
arrival
with the
check:
$5.56,
as
Lincoln,
grim
as a sailor
in a
squall,
takes
the scene in
with
his green eyes.
Dead
August
lingers like
an
uninvited party
guest;
everyone
is on vacation
or
else they've died and
turned
grey as the
statues
in the park--
dead
as the old days,
as
the old ways--
dead
as the brain cells
of
those who do not
use
them; dead
like
the moon, like
Latin,
like this town,
like
my Aunt's stillborn
baby:
lifeless, nameless,
almost
forgotten.
Wayne
F. Burke's poetry has been widely published in print and online (including in
LOTHLORIEN Poetry Journal). He is author of eight full-length published
collections of poetry--most recently BLACK SUMMER (Spartan Press, 2021), and
one collection of short stories: TURMOIL & Other Stories, Adelaide Press,
NY,NY, 2020. He lives in Vermont (USA).
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