67 Cars
With incessant hazard
lights
front and rear, nictating
—
sharp red, dull, repeating.
Plus three police SUVs
also flashing, but blue
lights…
without sirens,…for the
dead.
Caddies, one hearse and
two more
limos for the family,
and one more for grave
flowers.
Tinned weepers and tinned
chauffeurs.
Tinned staties and tinned
lilies.
A single bronze-boxed
body.
Each and all roll
unpausing
through traffic lights
to Fairview.
This cortege is not so
bold
as a gilded Nile barge
or even horse-drawn
caisson.
Yet 67 cars are
a non-musical theatre —
silent but with a large
cast.
Roberta, 74,
is no more. Was she famous,
infamous or merely rich?
Gone to sing with the
angels,
was today her curtain
call?
Auxiliary Red
Lips need not be all
that plump,
but red remains right
and righteous.
Dozens of reds duel,
some patriotic…
Victory, Auxiliary,
Pirate, Majesty.
Redder than blood or
anything real.
Girls pink flushed in
flirtation
— fleetingly, strongly
joyful —
count coup, as the
Cheyenne
did in battle. They mark
boys.
Planting a flag in
foreign soil,
you might brand my
nipple,
(without sear and smell)
or
tattoo me (without pain
or stain).
That double, red
Hunter’s Bow
is flagrant on a white
collar.
Wives aha at dark signs
of sin
and sing, said you were untrue.
Red lips may mark
cocktail glasses,
coffee cups and
cigarette filters.
Church ladies and real
women alike
make red love to folded
tissues.
It is my choice to allow
marks
on a cheek, even a flag
on a pec.
You would claim me with
vermeil
lip smudges to prove
your visits.
To you, the red marks
are ownership
and I willingly wear
your marks.
This sudden, darker,
areola is proof
I was desired, sought,
and caught.
Penn Station Shame
Clinches and kisses abound in train
town,
ranging from sweet to lewd,
Each and all lasting too long for
the comfort of passersby
Her college girlfriend awaited
somewhere out on Long Island.
But neither of us would quit the
dare.
Her thigh climbed over my hip,
exposing merely lust, no parts.
Even with his brown skin and blue
uniform,
the official spectator obviously
blushed.
Finally, that Penn Station guard had
to say,
“This is a public place.”
We played the game until train time.
We had our personal business first.
This was worse, more public, than,
“No, you hang up.”
Lovers’ Necklace
We grieve each empty setting.
The necklace gapes, with tiny
claws curving for each lover
uncaptured or unpursued.
The necklace becomes heavy
and long, yet it is missing
stones we notice and desire.
In the Braille of memory
and of anticipation,
our fingers sense just the gaps.
Even in our subtle grief,
we would still wear this necklace
at all times and for all time.
There can be only one jewel
that belongs in each setting.
Redolence
Straighten an elbow to touch
fingers into a crystal bowl
brimming with hard candies.
Old ladies’ end tables kept
dishes of suckable amusements
in clear view and in reach.
Their ancient men invariably
plucked one angled candy, only
to crunch it loudly between molars.
After sipping your demitasse of
black tea,
you surely would find the half bath
to wash and dry your greedy hands.
There too wafts hard-candy scents,
odours of never-lit candles and
florals
from shell-shaped hand-soap bars.
Later in the dark, scents on
fingers,
sheets and undies were evocative—
creamed corn, cured tobacco leaf.
Not every waft has the power
of madeleines to transport. Yet,
each has memory and promise.
Absurd
Long-term lovers mind meld,
− Think Vulcan
Mr. Spock −
unaware and against their will.
Why have separate brains?
Two may suffice, but one is best.
The unobservant imagine
wife and hubby grow to look alike.
That’s for pets instead.
Spouses take each other’s minds.
Do not laugh when they invariably
finish sentences for the other.
They are aliens living within.
Michael Ball scrambled from newspapers through business and
technical pubs. Born in OK and raised in rural WV, he became more citified in
Manhattan and Boston. One of the Hyde Park Poets, he has moderate success
placing poems including in Griffel, Elevation Review, Gateway Review, Havik
Anthology, SPLASH!, Peregrine Journal, In Parentheses, Spillwords, It’s All
About Arts, Kind Writers, and Reality Break Press. Featured poet at Menino Arts
Center, Rozzie Reads, and Open Door Yoga Center for the Arts. and 2022 Boston
Mayor’s Poetry displayed in City Hall.
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