AMAZING GRACE
Rex could sing all verses of Amazing
Grace
to the tune of Ghost Riders In The Sky.
On
Saturday nights he would stand on a bar
in Chapel Hill and perform. His talent
had
no limits. The repertoire included a
swinging
12 Apostles version of the Pepsi
jingle—
Christianity Hits The Spot—and the
wonderful
On A Hill Far Away Stood An Old
Chevrolet.
At a reunion in the 80s he arrived
wearing
a clerical collar. By 2015 his list of
religious
publications from the Episcopal Book
Store
took 30 seconds to print out. We
decided
at our 50th that God isn’t
particular about
who he gives talent to or what talent he gives.
Arthur Murray's Boite
de Nuit
Until our 40th reunion thoughts
of Dorothy were
centred in 1957
Dubuque and our
Arthur Murray
dance class.
Dorothy with no tits,
black frame
glasses, brown tie oxfords.
Plainness hiding
a beauty that flowered
three years later
like the last tulip
in an Iowa spring.
The class we
all hated gave me
weekly closeness
to love as
impossible as the
offer of free
drinks tomorrow in
a world where
tomorrow never comes.
There we were
sweating in a
cramped studio on
Bluff street, the
box of the night
our parents
delivered us to like
prisoners of
dictators to
learn the basic
box step, the key
to unlocking the
cool foxtrot
in 4/4 time. A
lesson repeated
endlessly to I'm Available,
Margie Rayburn's
only hit.
Partners changed
and there was
my secret love,
Dorothy, followed
by her
hyperventilation cured by a
paper bag kept
ready by Lucille our
sexless
instructor. At our reunion
Dorothy laughed
as we remembered
the past. I had
thought of her often
when I watched my
groceries go
into a paper bag.
My steps would
slow in the
parking lot and in silence
I would do a box
step—
think of the girl
that got away.
Dinner At Danny’s
Truth be known, she did not
want it to happen,
If you feel that way don’t come home.
A shouted warning after a morning
fight over a toothbrush before he left
slamming the door behind him—an act
dulling thoughts of last night at
Danny’s:
white table cloths, heavy menus, wine,
baskets
of napkin swaddled bread.
At the
office they found him slumped
over
his coffee cup dead at 35.
They were
married, then he was dead--
forever
gone, no morning kiss,
no
make up sex, no way to say,
I’m
sorry, I’m so sorry. I love you.
Robert
Halleck has written three collections of poetry: IT'S NEVER TOO LATE, OTHER
PLACES OTHER TIMES and CABBAGES AND KINGS. He has been nominated for a Pushcart
Prize. His recent poems have appeared in Big City Lit Magazine and New Verse
News.
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