MOTHER
LOAD
She
reads the telegram
bearing
the weight of its words
in
two hands
A
single sheet of paper
heaver
than Atlas could support
She
need read no further than
“It
is with the deepest regret . . .”
In
fact
she
knew
upon seeing the emboldened eagle
top of letterhead embossed
that
John
her only son
was gone
“It
is with the deepest regret . . .”
She
read out loud
making
the words come true
making
them her own
not
merely some dictated statement of fact
Making
them somehow heavier
riding
on air
Her
hands fell to her sides
her
sides were somehow seated in the old porch swing
its
rusty chains echoing the weeping of her heart
“It
is with the deepest regret . . .”
deepest regret
deepest regret
the swing repeated over and over
until
darkness robbed the words from the page by her side
the words she never spoke again
SECRETS
She
is
what makes him come home every night
Though
if you asked him – he’d deny it
He'd
tell you it was the dog
or
the big screen TV
or
the comfortable chair in which he watches his ballgames
But
that big blue Buick
hits
that driveway every night
after
a long day's work
because
he knows she's there waiting
as
happy to see him
as
he pretends not to be at the sight of her
Some
men are just funny that way
Wait
half a lifetime to get what they want
then
can't admit how good they feel about it
Most
people laugh at this pretend misery act
they
can see the love behind his eyes
She
hasn't told him yet
About
the cancer
and
the very short time frame
left
before them
She
can't bear to think what will happen to him
What
he'll be like without her
or
if the dog or the TV or the big old chair will comfort him
or
even
if the big blue Buick will remember
its way home
REMEMBERING
In the August hot Brooklyn night
I wake
reminded of death’s universal sadness
Eddie and Carmel
fallen to their ends
from the same Sixty-Fifth Street building
one day minus one year apart
Each
found by Skinny
taking the back alley shortcut
to our Sixty-Forth Street hangout
Sitting up in bed
realizing Skinny too is gone
too much juice in the needle
And Head who provided Skinny with the shot
and dumped him – cold – on the movie theater steps
later killed in a deal gone wrong
My cold sweet
drying
as I realize how lucky I was
to have found music and poetry
and written myself
a different ending
PERFECT TIMING
I could
as I suppose everybody could
have lived better
But I lived the way I did
and somehow
got to where I am
I could
as I suppose everybody could
have chosen one life – and stuck to it
But without trying others
how would I have arrived
here
I could
as I suppose everybody could
danced with more partners
But thankfully
the music stopped
with you – in my arms
LUCKY BREAK
I could not have made her up
Not in a million years conceived of her acceptance
of a bum like me
A drunken musician/bar fighter
who took no insult
and refused no challenge
What did she see in me?
Fifty years later
she - gone
I still cannot figure – why me
There were many others
who saw
and wished for her beauty
But somehow
she chose
to save my life
with her love
Jim Hart was born and raised in Brooklyn, NY where he still resides. After beginning his working life as a drummer on rock and blues bands he spent thirty years in the NYC Sanitation Department.
Jim has had his work published in over seventy journals throughout the world. He has written five Poetry Collections, "Ramblings Of a One-Eyed Garbage Man," "A Handful Of Smoke," "Just Another Friday Nighty In Brooklyn," "Loving Sue," and "Missing Sue."
He is also the author of the Noir Harry Parker Myster Series, "A Tom Collins To Go," "The Aviation Cocktail," and "Bloody Mary."
Mr. Hart is a member of The Private Eye Writers of America and ASCAP.
These are utterly ble*ddy brilliant! Um, and I don't sware...
ReplyDeleteI mean, the echo sounds, the final lines, the variety. Good to 'meet you', Jim Hart!