A MUFFLED VOICE
A muffled
voice mouths a curse,
the wind
threatens the trees
and roily
clouds advance.
“Quiet,” someone hisses.
“They’ll hear you.”
A rustling,
then,
a shaft of
light
splits the
room --
then, darkness.
Nothing
remains.
And I hear my breath
rattle from my
throat . . .
and watch . .
.
and listen.
ON THE ROAD
And, I crossed
the street,
stuck out my
thumb
to begin the
long hitch
back home.
It was July,
1960,
and I was
seventeen,
dumb and, I
thought,
in love.
Jacksonville.
N. Main
Street.
I had been
Kerouac —
on the road
for three or
four days,
scuffing along
Route 17,
sleeping in
the woods
begging for water,
trying to make
it
to Fort Lauderdale.
And then
the phone call.
“I’ve met someone . . .
and if you
come,
my father will
. . ..”
I hang up
and give
myself
a new name, “Asshole.”
Then, looking
North,
I wonder
What would
Sal Paradise
do?
PAST OR PROLOGUE
Sitting on the
bench by the beach,
I mention the
old canard
about the Dodo
and how I
sometimes feel that
I, too, am
flying backwards,
more
interested
in where I
came from
than in where
I am going.
Perhaps it’s age,
being
overwhelmed
by technology,
by computers
and their
bytes;
by lasers,
iPhones
and crypto -
whatever
that drives me
to return
to what was my
prologue,
and now, in my
mind,
nothing more
than a shadow play
where my past
is a cut-out figure,
a dark
silhouette on a blank wall,
reminding me
that, the past
cannot become
the present.
ONE RED SHOE
I knew, the
moment I opened
the door to
our apartment.
It was not
just the quiet
or the absence
of the soft music
that always
greeted me as I entered.
There was an
emptiness in the air.
I called her
name once
and then,
again.
At first
glance, things looked
as they
should. Nothing
appeared
changed.
The living
room was as neat
as always.
In the
kitchen, last night’s dishes
had been
cleaned and put away.
The small
stack of bills on the counter
had disappeared.
Peanut, our
cat, came over
purring and
rubbing against my leg.
I called her
name once more,
knowing
silence would be my answer.
My stomach
tightened
and deep
inside, I knew.
As I entered
the bedroom, I paused,
scanning the
room and seeing
that
everything was in its place.
And then I
noticed the small things.
The photo we
took on our last cruise;
her comb and
hairbrush.
Gone.
My mouth was
dry and my heart
began to pound
as I opened the door
to her closet.
Staring into
its emptiness,
I could feel
my head drop,
my shoulders
slump.
All that she
had left behind
was something
she wore
when we last
danced.
One red high
heel shoe.
SO NOW
So now, I’ve hit 80
and have been
thinking
of how my
father died —
42 and
stepping from a car —
dead before he
hit the ground.
Thinking how
that’s not so bad
a way to go --
unless it’s you.
Now, I sit on
my deck
in the sun and
feel
Fall settle
in; watch the grass
lose a little
of it’s green;
count the dry,
browned leaves.
A dog yaps
somewhere.
There was
never much
between us --
never much
time spent
together doing,
I guess, what
fathers and sons
are supposed
to do together;
but now, I
think of him
slouched in
his chair,
head resting
on his hand,
dozing,
waiting, as I am,
for the ground
to rise up.
Russell
Dupont, poet, artist, novelist, has published work in the albatross, Spectrum,
The I, For Poets Only, The Anthology of South Shore Poets, Re-Side, Oddball,
JerryJazzMusician, Adelaide Literary Magazine, Rye Whiskey Review, Last Stanza
Poetry Journal, the new post-literate, DADAKU, One Sentence and the Northern
New England Review. He is the author of three novels: KING & TRAIN, WAITING
FOR THE TURK and MOVIN’ ON. He is also the author of four chapbooks — two
non-fiction; UP IN WISCONSIN: TRAVELS WITH KINSLEY and THERE IS NO DAM NOW AT
RICHFORD; and two books of poetry: WINTER, 1948 and ESTABLISHING HOME PLATE;
and examples of his work have been collected in the Archives of UMass Boston.
Deep reflective stages of life, moving requires re reading, pausing deep into one's soul. Red Shoe = love's lost Thank you for sharing John C
ReplyDeleteLoved your poems!!
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