Anticipation
We apprehend the beginning
and the end before they arrive.
Before they arrive we begin to
Survive the dull meeting,
the stern rebuke, the doctor’s
ominous words.
We greet them all -- the ominous,
or stern, or dull coming
up the street toward us,
waving, know them well.
We crave the presence of
the future, the answer before
the question, their applause in
advance of our dance.
We shake the present
hold it up to the light
Study it, speculate, surmise,
read our tea leaves, and realize.
Death
I’m tired of Death and all his dying
and those black clothes
he’ll wear everywhere he goes.
and those black clothes
he’ll wear everywhere he goes.
That old grim Reaper, the grim Weeper
coming up the walk, walking up,
waking up the dread,
ringing the bell, bringing the dead –
the call in the middle of night,
the fright it brings, it rings,
and he’s there on the stair waiting
anticipating my one last play
my hope to delay
the casual necessity of him and
his dim ironic grin.
coming up the walk, walking up,
waking up the dread,
ringing the bell, bringing the dead –
the call in the middle of night,
the fright it brings, it rings,
and he’s there on the stair waiting
anticipating my one last play
my hope to delay
the casual necessity of him and
his dim ironic grin.
I’m tired of Death and all this dying,
but while I bemoan it, I know
I can’t postpone it.
but while I bemoan it, I know
I can’t postpone it.
Death arrives with a swagger
that would stagger the best of us –
and, of course, he’ll be coming
for the rest of us.
that would stagger the best of us –
and, of course, he’ll be coming
for the rest of us.
Distances
Hints
of beyond
As
far as the eye can see
Even
further…
I’ve
been on mountaintops
On
clear days
I’ve
stood on decks
As
the shore faded
Watched
out car back windows
Going
away
I
have watched the horizon
From
airplanes
I’ve
walked the beach
Looking
outward
Called
out and
Waited
for an echo
Stood
in doorways
At
windows
In
terminals
In
stations
By
the sides of too many roads
I
have saved up
Bought
tickets
Planned
and planned
Made
calls
Sent
letters and emails
I
have longed for
And
waited
Asked
for help
And
heard nothing
J. K. Durick is a writing teacher at the Community College of Vermont and an online writing tutor. His
recent poems have appeared in Decades
Review, Northern New England Review,
Third Wednesday, and Up the River.
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