Wednesday 16 October 2024

Seven Poems by John Yamrus

 




he loved  

 

spending  

time with her... 

 

especially  

when she’d decide  

to shut up for a minute.   

 

he  

didn’t know  

what he liked more... 

 

her or the silence. 

 

you’re lucky, she said.   

 

he  

rolled  

on his side  

and said half  

to the pillow and half to the wall: 

 

luck’s nothing to be proud of.” 

 

it was  

one of those days  

when the wind seemed to be talking  

 

and  

the sun  

hid behind a cloud.




poetry is 

 

not 

a science... 

 

the  

truth is not  

a secret for the few... 

 

and  

this dog 

sleeping in the sun 

 

has it  

all figured out.




his poems  

 

always  

tried to tackle  

the “big issues”... 

 

Death,  

Life, Love, Good, Evil... 

 

all the  

usual stuff  

that needs to be  

spelled with a capital letter.   

 

his only  

other goal in life  

was to one day be The Village Idiot.   

 

the poems tried hard,  

but never quite  

hit the mark.   

 

but, after  

he married Betty,  

she told him (every day of his life)  

 

in no  

uncertain terms,  

the town could stop the search. 

 

 


the place smelled like the blues 

 

it  

smelled of  

sweat and poverty  

and last night’s turnip greens.  

 

but,  

it’s where he  

did his best writing.  

 

poems  

filled with sadness  

 

and  

the agony of  

a shot glass left empty  

in a sink filled with dishes,  

tears and more than a little regret.




my friend Ted  

 

always  

wanted to write.  

 

he said  

he said he knew  

he had a book in him... 

 

of course,  

everyone does... 

 

but, Ted really did.  

 

the  

problem was  

Ted loved to talk... 

 

he  

was a better  

talker than a writer.  

 

when  

he talked,  

people listened.  

 

and  

when he paused,  

they held their breath. 

 

Ted used to  

call me and talk about  

the book he wanted to write... 

 

about  

what it was like  

for him growing up during the war... 

 

it was  

World War II  

and Ted had some stories... 

 

good ones.  

 

interesting ones.  

 

the problem was,  

except for some notes,  

he never really wrote them down.  

 

and  

the only one  

left to tell you that  

 

is me.




a rock band  

 

had asked me  

to be their opening act  

 

for  

a concert  

after the release  

of their latest album.  

 

it was  

a double album  

 

and  

it was good,  

and so were the band.  

 

they’re  

not young anymore,  

 

but neither am i 

 

so, i said yeah,  

i'd do it,  

 

and it was  

the first time in decades  

that my wife came to a reading of mine,  

 

mostly because  

it technically wasn’t my show,  

 

and  

the place was  

also a restaurant,  

 

so we could eat... 

 

and  

anyway,  

she sat there,  

 

in the dark,  

at the back of the room,  

but i could still see her, smiling,  

 

and  

for some reason  

i didn’t get nervous.  

 

the band  

was already up  

and i did 15 or 20 minutes, 

 

and i was good,  

 

and  

people laughed  

and smiled and clapped,  

 

and  

for the first  

time in a long time  

 

i left  

a reading  

with a good feeling,  

 

a full stomach  

 

and  

an amazing woman  

who for some unknown reason  

 

still loves only me.




she used to  

 

piss him off  

with her habit of saying  

 

supposably  

 

and  

for all intensive purposes,  

 

but, 

in the grand  

scheme of things  

it didn’t really matter,  

 

because  

every now and then  

 

she’d  

stop her talk  

and they could just  

sit there, doing nothing,  

 

while  

the dogs of summer  

barked and the day grew old.







John Yamrus - In a career spanning more than 50 years as a working writer, John Yamrus has published 39 books. He has also had more than 3,500 poems published in magazines and anthologies around the world. A number of his books and poems are taught in college and university courses. He is widely considered to be a master of minimalism and the neo-noir in modern poetry.  His two most recent books are the memoir THE STREET and a volume of poetry called PEOPLE (AND OTHER BAD IDEAS). In addition, 3 of his books have been published in translation.

 

  

  

     

 

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